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PrEP uptake and HIV viral suppression when PrEP is integrated into Ugandan ART clinics for HIV-negative members of HIV-serodifferent couples: A stepped wedge cluster randomized trial

Authors :
Renee Heffron
Timothy R. Muwonge
Katherine K. Thomas
Florence Nambi
Lylianne Nakabugo
Joseph Kibuuka
Dorothy Thomas
Erika Feutz
Allison Meisner
Norma C. Ware
Monique A. Wyatt
Jane M. Simoni
Ingrid T. Katz
Herbert Kadama
Jared M. Baeten
Andrew Mujugira
Jane Simoni
Deborah Donnell
Ruanne Barnabas
Cole Grabow
Kristin Ciccarelli
Caitlin Scoville
Katrina Ortblad
Mai Nakitende
Diego Izizinga
Vicent Kasita
Brenda Kamusiime
Alisaati Nalumansi
Collins Twesige
Grace Kakoola
Charles Brown
Sylvia Namanda
Emily Pisarski
Source :
EClinicalMedicine. 52
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Global scale-up of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) includes services to HIV-negative people in partnerships with people living with HIV (serodifferent couples). Data are needed on HIV outcomes, including uptake and adherence to PrEP and antiretroviral treatment (ART), to describe the impact of integrating PrEP into an existing HIV program.Using a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial design, we launched PrEP delivery for HIV-negative members of serodifferent couples in Uganda by integrating PrEP into existing ART programs for people living with HIV. The program provided PrEP training for ART providers, ongoing technical assistance, and a provisional supply chain mechanism for PrEP medication. Primary data on PrEP initiation, PrEP refills, ART initiation, and HIV viremia at 6 months (measured at 42-270 days) were collected through data abstraction of medical records from HIV-serodifferent couples sequentially enrolling at the ART clinics. Modified Poisson regression models, controlling for time and cluster, compared viral suppression (1000 copies/ml) before and after launch of the PrEP program. This trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03586128.From June 1, 2018-December 15, 2020, 1,381 HIV-serodifferent couples were enrolled across 12 ART clinics in Kampala and Wakiso, Uganda, including 730 enrolled before and 651 after the launch of PrEP delivery. During the baseline period, 99.4% of partners living with HIV initiated ART and 85.0% were virally suppressed at 6 months. Among HIV-negative partners enrolled after PrEP launched, 81.0% (527/651) initiated PrEP within 90 days of enrolling; among these 527, 11.2% sought a refill 6 months later. In our powered intent-to-treat analysis, 82.1% and 76.7% of partners living with HIV were virally suppressed, respectively, which was not a statistically significant difference (RR=0.94, 95% CI: 0.82-1.07) and was stable across sensitivity analyses.Integration of PrEP into ART clinics reached a high proportion of people in HIV-serodifferent relationships and did not improve the already high frequency of HIV viral suppression among partners living with HIV.National Institute of Mental Health (R01MH110296).

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
25895370
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EClinicalMedicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f93f4879e990c179523a84a643f6ff20