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Integrated Stepped Care for Unhealthy Alcohol Use in HIV

Yale University logo

Yale University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Alcoholism
Hepatitis C
Liver Diseases, Alcoholic
HIV

Treatments

Other: Integrated Stepped Care (ISC)
Other: Treatment as Usual

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01410123
U01AA020795 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
1105008544

Details and patient eligibility

About

The study is a series of 3 linked randomized clinical trials of 6 month duration, with a total of 12 month follow-up, to evaluate the effect of Integrated Stepped Care on drinking outcomes and HIV biologic markers (including VACS index) in HIV-infected patients with unhealthy alcohol use.

Full description

Unhealthy alcohol use threatens the health benefits seen with antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV-infected (HIV+) patients. Although research has demonstrated the efficacy of brief interventions, motivational counseling, and medications to treat unhealthy alcohol use in HIV uninfected patients, there is limited research or use of these treatments in HIV+ patients. We have demonstrated that integrated treatment of addiction in HIV clinics is feasible. Stepped care algorithms can facilitate the evaluation of varying intensities of treatments for unhealthy alcohol use. The proposed study will compare onsite Integrated Stepped Care treatment (ISC) to treatment as usual (TAU) in three, linked, 6-month randomized clinical trials in 642 HIV+ patients with unhealthy alcohol use. Screened patients are randomized to ISC or TAU after determining that they meet criteria for either 1) at-risk drinking, 2) alcohol abuse or dependence or 3) moderate alcohol consumption in the presence of liver disease. ISC and TAU are tailored to the drinking category. ISC for at-risk drinkers and those with Moderate Alcohol use and Liver Disease begins with a brief intervention and is stepped up to Motivational Enhancement Therapy (MET) in those who meet predefined failure criteria. ISC for abuse or dependence begins with addiction physician management (APM) including alcohol pharmacotherapy if not contraindicated. APM is stepped up to include MET if predefined failure criteria are met. The study will test the hypothesis that ISC leads to decreased alcohol consumption and improved HIV biomarkers. Data analyses will be conducted on the intention to treat sample.

Enrollment

319 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Be HIV-infected and receiving HIV care at one of the participating medical centers.

  2. Meet one of the following criteria for unhealthy alcohol use:

    • At-risk Drinking Study- greater than 14 drinks per week or greater than 4 drinks per occasion in men and greater than 7 drinks per week or greater than 3 drinks per occasion in women and those over 65.
    • Alcohol Abuse or Dependence Study - Meet DSM-IV TR criteria for alcohol abuse or dependence, not in remission.
    • Moderate Alcohol + Liver Disease Study - Report alcohol consumption in the past month, are HCV co-infected, confirmed by HCV viral load or have liver fibrosis - Fib-4 (>1.45). Do not meet criteria for at-risk drinking, alcohol abuse or dependence.
  3. Be able to understand English and provide informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Be acutely suicidal, or with a psychiatric condition that affects the ability to provide informed consent or participate in counseling interventions (e.g. psychotic, dementia, delusional).
  2. Be currently enrolled in formal treatment for alcohol (excluding self-help, e.g. Alcoholics Anonymous)
  3. Have medical conditions that would preclude completing or be of harm during the course of the study.
  4. Pregnant or nursing women or women who do not agree to use a reliable form of birth control.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

319 participants in 2 patient groups

Treatment as Usual (TAU)
Other group
Treatment:
Other: Treatment as Usual
Integrated Stepped Care (ISC)
Other group
Treatment:
Other: Integrated Stepped Care (ISC)

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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