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Mindfulness and Acceptance Based Therapy for Adolescents Living With HIV

I

Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, Uganda

Status

Completed

Conditions

Adjustment Reaction With Anxiety and Depression
Medication Adherence
Mental Health Issue

Treatments

Behavioral: Standard of care
Behavioral: Mindfulness and acceptance based therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05010317
D43TW011304 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Adolescents represent a growing share of people living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), yet show poor adherence to medication and viral suppression (VS) compared to adults. Investigators postulate that to achieve optimal adherence, support interventions that resonate with life-stages changes in adolescence need to be tested and promoted. Mindfulness and acceptance based interventions are slowly gaining traction as appropriate for adolescents.

The study proposes to explore acceptability of an adapted mindfulness and acceptance-based psychosocial intervention (acceptance and commitment therapy: Discoverer, Noticer, Advisor-values model-ACT-DNA-v), among providers (health care practitioners -HCPs) and users (adolescents living with HIV/AIDS-ALWHA). Further, it endeavors to measure feasibility and effectiveness of ACT-DNA-v in reducing psychological barriers to adherence among ALWHAs. The study is to be conducted at two public health centers in Kampala-Uganda. The study design is exploratory sequential mixed-methods; where qualitative data is to be used to explore acceptance of ACT-DNA-v, while quantitative data will be used to measure feasibility of the intervention and its effectiveness in reducing psychosocial barriers to adherence. Qualitative exploratory methods will guide exploration of acceptability of ACT-DNA-v among users and providers; collecting data with a semi-structured interview on domains of inquiry including; understanding, satisfaction, intention to use and perceived appropriateness of ACT-DNA-v. A randomized control trial with quantitative surveys at baseline, post-intervention and follow-up will used to measure the effects of the intervention on process and clinical outcomes among ALWHA. Thematic data analysis will be used to analyze qualitative data, while T-test, Wilcoxon rank sum test, Fisher's exact and Chi-square tests respectively will be used to ascertain average mean differences between the ACT group and the control group on the outcome parameters.

Full description

Background The success of antiretroviral therapy (ART) is highly dependent on adherence and persistent care engagement. However, despite efforts to improve sustained ART use among adolescents, non-adherence persists. Studies using medication possession ratios and clinical counts have found adherence to ART among adults to be at 72% compared to 68% among young people, furthermore, statistics on VL measures in 2017 show that 74.2% of adults above 50 years had achieved viral load suppression compared to 39.6% of adolescents. Additionally, almost 50% of HIV cases in Uganda are among young people. Poor adherence among ALWHA undermines the HIV care cascade and efforts to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030. As a consequence, young people are the only group in Uganda among whom HIV mortality is increasing. The unique developmental changes at the onset of adolescence have been cited as main factors influencing psychosocial pathways into health, resulting in psychopathological barriers to medication adherence among ALWHA. Developmentally appropriate psychosocial interventions need to be added into adolescents' HIV care. However, to date, psychosocial support interventions targeted for the unique developmental changes in adolescence remain limited. Most interventions in use with young people are developed for adult populations, despite adult-focused interventions being shown to have limited effectiveness among young people. Besides, some interventions like short message services are expensive and difficult to sustain, while others lack a clear mechanism of change for replication.

Mindfulness and acceptance based interventions, specifically ACT-DNA-v, are developmentally appropriate for adolescents because they are designed to promote emotion regulation and values consistent living, counteracting the imbalance created by developmental changes amidst undeveloped executive functions such as judgment. Besides, ACT-DNA-v relies on use of art and metaphors which serve as aids to symbolic reasoning (a change instigated by adolescence). The intervention is also centered around values and adolescence is a stage of establishing identity. Finally, ACT-DNA-V has a proper mechanism of change called psychological flexibility, thus, it can easily be replicated. However, while mindfulness and acceptance based interventions have been found to be effective in improving mental health of adolescents in the developed world, they have not been tested in resource limited settings, with adolescents living with HIV and for outcomes beyond mental health. Thus, this study set out to adapt ACT-DNA-v for use in a resource limited setting, explore its acceptability among users (ALWHAs) and providers (HCPs), measure its feasibility when used with adolescents and evaluate its impact on reducing psychosocial barriers to adherence, improve self-reported adherence and reducing viral load.

Study Objectives The study aims to achieve the following objectives;

.To adapt and explore acceptability of ACT-DNA-v among users (ALWHA) and providers (HCPs).

.To measure feasibility of the adapted ACT-DNA-v for use with ALWHA.

.To examine the impact of ACT-DNA-v on reducing proximal psychosocial barriers to medication adherence (depression, anxiety and stigma) among ALWHA.

.To measure effectiveness of a mindfulness based intervention (ACT-DNA-v) on self-reported adherence among ALWHA in Kampala, and ascertain its impact on viral load reduction via analysis of data from medical records

Hypothesis .Participants receiving the ACT-DNA-v intervention will report a significant reduction in depression, anxiety & stigma at four months' follow-up as compared to participants in the control group.

.Participants receiving the ACT-DNA-v intervention will have significantly higher levels of reported ART adherence and lowered viral load at four months' follow-up compared to participants not receiving this intervention.

Methods Overall design To achieve the study goals, a mixed methods design will be used, specifically exploratory sequential. The mixing is intended for purposes of expansion (where qualitative data will explore acceptability of the mindfulness based intervention and quantitative data measures if the accepted intervention is effective). This will improve the usefulness of the findings, (qualitative data evaluating the process while quantitative data evaluate the outcomes). The study will involve two sub-studies; formative/qualitative study and intervention/quantitative study.

Enrollment

122 patients

Sex

All

Ages

15 to 19 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Participant should be 15-19 years of age.
  • Diagnosed HIV positive.
  • Attending care at the two study sites (Kisenyi and Kitebi) for the last 6 months.
  • On first or second line of treatment.
  • Can speak/understand Luganda or English.
  • Willing to provide informed consent/assent.
  • All records will be confirmed via clinic medical charts.

Exclusion criteria

  • A participant plan to move out of the catchment area within six months.
  • Participant is participating in another study related to HIV and care improvement.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

122 participants in 2 patient groups

Group receiving the mindfulness and acceptance intervention
Experimental group
Description:
This group will under go four sessions of the mindfulness and acceptance based therapy. These sessions will be delivered in four weeks, utilizing 2 hours every week. This will be in addition to the standard of care (clinic based counselling).
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standard of care
Behavioral: Mindfulness and acceptance based therapy
Control group
Active Comparator group
Description:
This group will continue receiving the usual clinic based care (counselling) only.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standard of care

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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