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A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Bruthas Project

University of California San Francisco (UCSF) logo

University of California San Francisco (UCSF)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

HIV Infection

Treatments

Behavioral: Bruthas Project
Behavioral: Standard HIV Testing and Counseling

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01270230
R01MH090899 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
1R01MH09089901-A1

Details and patient eligibility

About

African American men who have sex with men and women (AAMSMW) are at particular risk for contracting and transmitting HIV, and represent a priority population for developing effective interventions. Despite the urgent need for effective prevention approaches for AAMSMW, to our knowledge no evidence-based HIV interventions have been developed and tested for this population. This study is a randomized controlled trial of the Bruthas Project(BP), an individual-level HIV prevention intervention, which builds on standardized HIV counseling and testing. Delivered in a series of four sessions by trained African American male counselors, the BP focuses on reviewing HIV transmission routes for male and female partners, strengthening sexual communication skills with both male and female partners, and improving condom use skills and other safer sex negotiation strategies. A randomized controlled trial of BP is necessary to determine the efficacy of the intervention and can lead to improved public health efforts at reducing HIV risk behavior among AAMSMW and in the African American community more generally. To evaluate the effect of the BP, the investigators will recruit and enroll a cohort of 400 AAMSMW who will be randomly assigned to either the intervention condition, in which they will be offered BP, or to the comparison condition, in which they will receive standardized HIV testing and counseling with referral to case management. The investigators will follow the cohort over 9 months and will assess participants at three time points: baseline, 3 months follow-up, and 6 months follow-up.

Full description

African Americans account for half of all Americans currently living with AIDS, and men account for two-thirds of all African Americans with HIV. AAMSMW are at particular risk for contracting and transmitting HIV, and represent a priority population for developing effective interventions. Studies of AAMSMW conducted in multiple HIV-epicenters in the United States have reported high rates of unprotected intercourse with male and female partners, concurrent partnerships, and frequent substance use before sex, accompanied by non-disclosure and secrecy regarding sexual risk behaviors. These behavioral dynamics are likely to fuel transmission of HIV and other STDs in diverse sexual networks and communities. Despite the urgent need for effective prevention approaches for AAMSMW, to our knowledge no evidence-based HIV interventions have been developed and tested for this population.

We propose to test a behavioral prevention intervention, the BP, to reduce HIV-related sexual risk behavior among AAMSMW. The intervention was designed through four years of formative research with AAMSMW consisting of: (1) qualitative in-depth interviews, focus groups and field ethnography; (2) protocol and measure development; (3) pilot testing and evaluation; and (4) further refinement following process and preliminary outcome data. The BP counseling process was formulated on principles of the Information-Motivation-Behavior (IMB) theory of HIV prevention, and is characterized by an individual-level counseling process that is specifically tailored to recognize the social and cultural contexts that inform sexual behavior for AAMSMW. Delivered in a series of four sessions by trained African American male counselors, the BP focuses on reviewing HIV transmission routes for male and female partners, strengthening sexual communication skills with both male and female partners, and improving condom use skills and other safer sex negotiation strategies. Evidence thus far indicates that BP is an acceptable and feasible model for providing HIV prevention counseling to this population, and pilot outcome data show promising indications of behavior change. A team of trained BP staff have successfully utilized a multi-tiered outreach approach to identify AAMSMW, recruit eligible individuals, and engage and retain participants in a longitudinal evaluation design. A randomized controlled trial of BP is necessary to determine the efficacy of the intervention and can lead to improved public health efforts at reducing HIV risk behavior among AAMSMW and in the African American community more generally.

Enrollment

396 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 or older
  • African American
  • Male
  • History of sex with male and female partners in the past two years
  • English speaker

Exclusion criteria

  • participation in previous research with Bruthas Project
  • non English speaker
  • identifies as gay

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

396 participants in 2 patient groups

Comparison Group, Standard HIV-CT
Experimental group
Description:
The comparison group will receive standardized HIV counseling and testing (HIV-CT), with referrals to case management.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standard HIV Testing and Counseling
Intervention Group, Bruthas Counseling
Experimental group
Description:
Participants assigned to this arm receive four individual HIV prevention counseling sessions.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Bruthas Project

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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