| Literature DB >> 35904695 |
Catherine Kiptinness1,2, Alexandra P Kuo3, Adriana M Reedy4, Cheryl C Johnson5, Kenneth Ngure3,6,2, Anjuli D Wagner3,2, Katrina F Ortblad7.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: HIV self-testing (HIVST) has the potential to expand access to and uptake of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) delivery. We conducted a systematic literature review to understand the evidence on HIVST use for PrEP delivery. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: HIV prevention; HIV self-testing; Implementation science; PrEP delivery; Sub-Saharan Africa; Systematic literature review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35904695 PMCID: PMC9334974 DOI: 10.1007/s11904-022-00617-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr HIV/AIDS Rep ISSN: 1548-3568 Impact factor: 5.495
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram of reviewed and included studies in our review of the literature on HIV self-testing to support HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis delivery
Descriptive characteristics of studies included in our review, N=81
| Characteristics | Randomized controlled trials | Values and preferences studies |
|---|---|---|
| WHO region | ||
| African Region (AFR) | 3 (100%) | 4 (80%) |
| Region of the Americas (AMR) | 0 | 1 (20%) |
| Country income level | ||
| Low and lower-middle | 3 (100%) | 4 (80%) |
| Upper-middle | 0 | 1 (20%) |
| Study population3 | ||
| Adolescent girls and young women | 0 | 1 (20%) |
| HIV serodifferent heterosexual couples | 1 (33%) | 1 (20%) |
| Men who have sex with men | 0 | 1 (20%) |
| Postpartum women | 1 (33%) | 0 |
| Sex workers | 1 (33%) | 3 (60%) |
| Transgender people | 1 (33%) | 2 (40%) |
| Women not in HIV serodifferent couples | 1 (33%) | 1 (20%) |
| Distribution of PrEP | ||
| Facility/clinic | 3 (100%) | 4 (80%) |
| Home-based | 0 | 1 (20%) |
| PrEP modality | ||
| Daily oral | 3 (100%) | 5 (100%) |
| HIVST type 3 | ||
| Blood-based | 1 (33%) | 1 (20%) |
| Oral-fluid based | 3 (100%) | 4 (80%) |
| Not mentioned | 0 | 1 (20%) |
| Primary outcome: HIVST for PrEP3 | ||
| Continuation as desired | 1 (33%) | 3 (60%) |
| Continuation as prescribed | 3 (100%) | 3 (60%) |
| Continuation as needed | 0 | 0 |
| Initiation | 0 | 0 |
Abbreviations: WHO, World Health Organization; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; STI, sexually transmitted infections
1Data are shown for eight included manuscripts and conference abstracts, which represented seven unique PrEP trials, delivery programs, or values and preferences studies (because some studies reported findings for the same population or the same PrEP program)
2There was no overlap in randomized trials and values and preferences studies
3The frequencies and percentages in this category sum to greater than the total number of studies because several studies included more than one study population
Description of effectiveness studies and key findings related to HIVST use for PrEP delivery, N=31
| Study | Country, enrollment period | Population | Design | Intervention and outcome definition | Comparison | Effect on PrEP initiation and/or continuation | Other findings (e.g., retention, HIV incidence, creatinine levels) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mujugira A, et al., | Uganda May 2018–Jan 2020 | Sex workers | 1:1 randomized trial (parallel assignment) | ||||
Ngure K, et al., | Kenya May 2018–May 2021 | People at HIV risk | 2:1 randomized non-inferiority trial (parallel assignment) | ||||
Davey DJ, et al., (NCT04897737) | South Africa Aug 2020–Apr 2021 | Women, 1-6 months postpartum | 1:1 randomized trial (parallel assignment) | ||||
Abbreviations: PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; HIVST, HIV self-test; FSWs, female sex workers; MSM, men who have sex with men; TGW, transgender women; TGM, transgender men; SD, serodifferent; AGYW, adolescent girls and young women; SOC, standard of care; RDT, rapid diagnostic testing; DBS, dried blood spots; TFV-DP, tenofovir-diphosphate; RD, risk difference; OR, odds ratio; aOR, adjusted odds ratio; RR, risk ratio; CI, confidence interval
1This section of the table reports findings from three included articles from randomized trials that had a comparator group
Description of studies exploring values and preferences for community-based PrEP service delivery, N=51
| Study | Country, enrollment period | Population | Study design | Intervention and outcome assessment | Key findings on preferences for HIVST-supported PrEP delivery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hoagland, B. | Brazil, April–May 2020 | MSM, TGNB currently using PrEP | Cross-sectional web-based survey | ||
Mujugira, (NCT03426670) | Uganda, June 2018–Jan 2020 | SW, TGW, MSM, intimate partners SW ( Intimate partners ( | Qualitative study | ||
Ngure K, et al., (NCT02775929) | Kenya, Nov 2013–June 2015 | HIV uninfected partners Male ( Female ( | Case study | ||
Ortblad KF, (NCT02827240 and NCT02846402) | Uganda and Zambia, Sept 2016–Oct 2016 | FSW Zambia ( Uganda ( | Cross-sectional survey at endline (among participants in two 1:1:1 randomized trials) | ||
Wanga, V | Kenya, Feb 2019–Nov 2019 | AGYW | Case study |
Abbreviations: PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; HIVST, HIV self-test; SOC, standard of care; COVID-19, coronavirus 2019; SW, sex workers; FSWs, female sex workers; MSM, men who have sex with men; TGW, transgender women; TGNB, transgender/non-binary; AGYW, adolescent girls and young women
1This table reports findings from 5 included articles of various study design
Summary of evidence on HIVST use to support PrEP delivery
| Factor | Explanation/evidence |
|---|---|
| Low to moderate risk of bias. | |
| HIVST-supported models of PrEP delivery resulted in similar PrEP continuation outcomes to standard-of-care PrEP delivery with no adverse events. | |
Feasibility. Participants completed HIVST between PrEP clinic visits and returned to the clinic for scheduled follow-up. These models reduced the overall number of PrEP clinic visits and saved time. Acceptability. HIVST-supported models of PrEP delivery reduced anxiety associated with PrEP clinic visits and were preferred to clinic-based or provider-delivered PrEP. | |
| No cost data on models of PrEP delivery supported by HIVST were identified. | |
| HIVST has the potential to increase equity by enabling more people to access or continue using PrEP. | |
| There are no studies on HIVST use for PrEP initiation or for stopping and restarting PrEP. More evidence is needed in this research area to better understand if individuals interested in PrEP can safely initiate or re-initiate PrEP as needed themselves with the assistance of HIVST. Additionally, no information on the costs of these models is available at the moment. | |
| 1Risk of bias was measured using RoB2 for RCTs and ROBINS-I for non-RCTs | |