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Development of a Telehealth-delivered Peer Navigation and Coping Skills Intervention to Increase PrEP Use in Young Black MSM

Mass General Brigham logo

Mass General Brigham

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Sexual Behavior
Hiv

Treatments

Behavioral: Treatment as Usual
Behavioral: Peer Navigation and Coping Skills

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05769270
1K23MH129240 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
2021P003220

Details and patient eligibility

About

This proposal seeks to adapt an existing peer navigation protocol (by adding coping skills and using telehealth) to be feasible, acceptable, and capable of supporting both PrEP uptake and P-E adherence for YBMSM ages 15-24.

Full description

Young Black men who have sex with men (YBMSM) ages 15-24 are heavily affected by HIV transmission and, at current rates, nearly half of Black MSM in the US will be infected with HIV in their lifetime. MSM represented 42% of all HIV diagnoses in Massachusetts from 2015-2017 and rates among Black MSM were 7 times that of White MSM. Fortunately, PrEP is highly effective at preventing HIV if adhered to in a prevention-effective (P-E) manner, which involves daily or event-based dosing specifically during periods of risk of HIV exposure (i.e., P-E adherence). Unfortunately, initiation and adherence among YBMSM is lower than other racial and age groups. According to Social Action Theory, barriers among YBMSM can be conceptualized as multifactorial, consisting of contextual factors (e.g., mood/arousal factors, structural factors, and demographics) and self-change processes (social interaction processes, motivations, generative capabilities, and problem-solving skills). An effective intervention must address contextual and self-change processes to promote PrEP uptake and P-E adherence.

The use of navigators (i.e., health workers trained to support ongoing adherence) has shown promise in promoting both PrEP uptake and sustained use in Black MSM by addressing structural barriers; however, rates of PrEP discontinuation were high. An NICHD-funded U01 study (SMILE) conducted in Boston found that peer navigation was highly acceptable for youth with HIV. The current study will use the Boston site of SMILE's peer navigation protocol. Notably, SMILE did not include behavioral components. In addition to structural barriers, YBSM often face unique barriers such as medical mistrust and disclosure concerns that affect self-change processes and impede PrEP uptake and P-E adherence. Limited knowledge exists on how these factors may impede PrEP use; however, it is clear these barriers may be addressed using problem/emotion-focused coping strategies. Many PrEP interventions require office visits, which may limit participation to those willing and able to present to a research office. Despite prevalent economic stressors, more than 90% of YMSM of color in various studies have smartphones, thus telehealth and remote study procedures may facilitate participation by YBMSM at highest HIV risk. This proposal seeks to adapt peer navigation from SMILE (adding coping skills and using telehealth) to be feasible, acceptable, and capable of supporting both PrEP uptake and P-E adherence for YBMSM ages 15-24.

Aim 1: Obtain qualitative knowledge on experiences of YBMSM ages 15-24 and specify role of peer navigator in promoting PrEP uptake and P-E adherence. I will conduct ~30 in-depth interviews with YBMSM at various stages of the PrEP continuum (e.g., never used, former user, and currently using PrEP) using a semi-structured interview guide. Interviews will explore how contextual factors and self-change processes influence PrEP uptake and P-E adherence. It will specify the role of a peer navigator (e.g., meeting frequency, demographics of navigator, topics to discuss and how best to employ technology-based tools and strategies). The knowledge gained from these interviews will be used to inform intervention development in Aim 2.

Aim 2: Develop and iteratively refine the intervention in consultation with a Youth Advisory Board Intervention development will be guided by Aim 1 findings and the IDEAS framework (i.e., generating ideas for intervention strategies, developing an initial intervention, gathering user feedback, and creating a viable intervention). We will recruit ~20 YBMSM via online and in-person strategies to participate in an advisory board meeting quarterly (virtually or in-person) to provide feedback on the intervention. The intervention will be iteratively refined after each meeting resulting in a refined intervention manual for use in the Aim 3 trial.

Aim 3: Evaluate the telehealth-delivered peer navigation/coping skills intervention for feasibility and acceptability. We will have a short, 3-month run-in of the intervention with 2-4 sexually active YBMSM, without HIV, ages 15-24. After further refinement, we will conduct a small (N=60) RCT of the peer navigation/coping skills intervention vs. treatment as usual (TAU; PrEP/case management referrals). The primary outcomes will be feasibility and acceptability. Secondarily, we will examine group differences in PrEP uptake, P-E adherence (proportion of covered sexual episodes), and sustained use at 6 months among those with risk. Outcomes of this aim will be a feasible (>75% enrollment; >75% of sessions attended) and acceptable (per questionnaires and exit interviews) intervention that can be tested in a larger efficacy trial in the context of a future R01 grant.

Enrollment

5 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

15 to 24 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • HIV-negative (by self-report)
  • Black race (of any ethnicity, by self-report)
  • age 15-24
  • sexually active
  • identifies as male
  • report HIV risk characterized by one or more of the following: 1) condomless anal or vaginal sex (receptive or penetrative) with a partner assigned male at birth (AMAB) of unknown HIV status in the last 6 months, 2) presence of rectal STI in the last 6 months, 3) condomless anal or vaginal sex with a known HIV-infected partner in the last 6 months (inclusive of partners who are undetectable), or 4) condomless anal or vaginal sex (receptive or penetrative) with casual partners assigned male at birth and endorsement of factors associated with not using PrEP based on my preliminary research with the MDPH (i.e., non-disclosure of same-sex behavior to provider, uninsured, history of incarceration, or lacking healthcare due to cost). For participants under the age of 18, condomless sex criteria can be met by having condomless oral sex.

Exclusion criteria

Those unable to complete consent in English and those with significant mental health diagnoses (e.g., uncontrolled psychosis) that would likely interfere with participation will be excluded and referred for treatment or alternative resources as necessary.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

5 participants in 2 patient groups

Peer Navigation and Coping Skills
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive peer navigation and coping skills to increase PrEP use.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Peer Navigation and Coping Skills
Behavioral: Treatment as Usual
Treatment as usual
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Participants will receive referrals to PrEP and services.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Treatment as Usual

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Calvin J Fitch, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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