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A range of observational and epidemiological studies have shown that the lifetime risk of HIV infection can be reduced by 70% through male circumcision.
Rwanda has a national plan to offer a voluntary male circumcision (MC) program to 2 million adult men in 2 years as part of a comprehensive HIV prevention strategy. To achieve this goal, the government launched a national study, based on the WHO Framework for Evaluation of Adult MC Devices, to assess the safety, efficacy and supremacy of the PrePex™ device when compared to surgical circumcision.
The PrePex device was developed to facilitate rapid scale up of non-surgical adult male circumcision in resource limited settings.
Rwanda validated the aforementioned endpoints via physicians in a Safety and Efficacy Study (NCT01150370) and Randomized, Controlled Comparison Study (NCT01284088). The procedure was bloodless, required no anesthesia, no sutures and no sterile settings, with 1 AE that was managed with minimal intervention.
Evidence submitted to members of WHO, USAID, UNAIDS and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and WHO audited the study site. The Safety and Efficacy study results were published in the JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, Sept 8, 2011, and presented in CROI 2011 and AUA 2011.
To achieve its national "catch up" campaign with minimal burden to the overly strained health system, which lacks physicians and surgical infrastructure, Rwanda needs to task shift the procedure to nurses. This study is meant to test the Safety and Efficacy in the hands of non-surgically trained nurses from the A1 and A2 cadres.
Full description
Male circumcision can reduce the lifetime risk of HIV infection by 60% in high risk areas such as Sub Saharan Africa. In 2009, the US Government (USAID) reported that scaling up male circumcision to reach 80 percent of adult and newborn males in 14 African countries by 2015 could potentially avert more than 4 million adult HIV infections between 2009 and 2025 and yield annual cost savings of US$1.4 - 1.8 billion after 2015, with a total net savings of US$20.2 billion between 2009 and 2025.
There are over 38 million adolescent and adult males in Africa that could benefit from male circumcision for HIV prevention. The challenge Africa faces is how to safely scale up a surgical procedure in resource limited settings.
Rwanda has a national plan to offer a voluntary male circumcision (MC) program to 2 million adult men in 2 years as part of a comprehensive HIV prevention strategy. To achieve this goal, the government launched a national study, based on the WHO Framework for Evaluation of Adult MC Devices, to assess the safety, efficacy and supremacy of the PrePex™ device when compared to surgical circumcision.
The PrePex device was developed to facilitate rapid scale up of non-surgical adult male circumcision in resource limited settings.
Rwanda validated the aforementioned endpoints via physicians in a Safety and Efficacy Study (NCT01150370) and Randomized, Controlled Comparison Study (NCT01284088). The procedure was bloodless, required no anesthesia, no sutures and no sterile settings, with 1 AE that was managed with minimal intervention.
Evidence submitted to members of WHO, USAID, UNAIDS and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and WHO audited the study site. The Safety and Efficacy study results were published in the JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, Sept 8, 2011, and presented in CROI 2011 and AUA 2011.
To achieve its national "catch up" campaign with minimal burden to the overly strained health system, which lacks physicians and surgical infrastructure, Rwanda needs to task shift the procedure to nurses. This study is meant to test the Safety and Efficacy in the hands of non-surgically trained nurses from the A1 and A2 cadres.
The study will evaluate 75 subjects in training phase, 100 subjects in a pilot group and then additional 415 in a pivotal group summing up to 590.
The 503 subjects assigned to the Pivotal group will undergo standard PrePex procedure and follow up and will be the main core of the study. An interim safety report will be prepared after 100 subjects (Pilot Group). Up to 75 subjects will be enrolled to the Training group.
The study will assess the safety and efficacy of the PrePex device when circumcision is performed by nurses, among healthy adult men scheduled for voluntary circumcision, in preparation for scale up.
The Study duration per subject will be 8 weeks.
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590 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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