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About
The purpose of this study is to gather information needed to develop a large prevention trial to decrease risk for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) transmission among HIV-discordant couples (where one person is HIV-positive and the other is HIV-negative) in Lesotho. The protocol team would like to explore new strategies for increasing the number of partners who receive an HIV test and whether this increase in testing also results in identifying HIV-discordant couples. These couples would be the focus of the future large prevention trial, therefore it is critical that the protocol team explore effective strategies for identifying and recruiting these couples. Men and women (index participants) who are attending Antenatal Care (ANC),Tuberculosis (TB) and antiretroviral therapy (ART) clinics will be recruited for this study. If they agree to take part, a testing team will visit their household and offer all adults staying in the house the opportunity to conduct a self-test for HIV. Seventy-five index participants will be enrolled into the study and have their homes visited by the testing team. The number of household members tested will depend on the number of people living in each household.
Full description
In Lesotho, a country with estimated 16% discordance among heterosexual couples, reaching male partners and couples in order to engage them in HIV testing to enable identification of discordant couples is an important first step for any HIV prevention and treatment efforts.
This is a feasibility study of the use of home-based HIV self-testing of partners and household members of individuals recruited from select Antenatal Care (ANC), Tuberculosis (TB) and antiretroviral therapy (ART) clinics in Lesotho. This study uses an observational design to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of home-based self-testing for HIV testing of partners and the effectiveness of this intervention to identify HIV discordant couples. It is hypothesized that a home-based self-testing intervention will increase the number of partners testing for HIV and will result in increased identification of newly diagnosed HIV-discordant couples, the target population of the planned Enhanced Prevention in Couples (EPIC) study.
Primary objectives of this study include:
Seventy-five men and women (index participants) will be recruited from antenatal, TB and ART clinics. HIV testing teams will visit index participant households and offer home-based HIV testing to all adult household members.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Index Participant
Women and men at least 18 years of age
Known HIV-positive status
Receiving antenatal care or TB/ART care/treatment at participating clinics
o For men and women recruited from TB clinic: must have been on TB medications for at least 8 weeks
Married or living with partner as if married
o Spouse must be a current member of index participant's household (i.e. married or living with the index participant, and currently residing in Lesotho)
Willing to allow study team to visit home and offer HIV counseling and testing to partner and other household members
Ability to speak English or Sesotho
Willing and able to provide signed informed consent
Household Members
Guests who stayed at the household the night before will also be offered participation
Exclusion criteria
53 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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