ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Mobile Technology to Extend Clinic-based Counseling for HIV+s in Uganda (EXTEND)

University of California San Francisco (UCSF) logo

University of California San Francisco (UCSF)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Alcohol Use, Unspecified
HIV/AIDS

Treatments

Behavioral: Live phone call booster session
Behavioral: In-person counseling session
Behavioral: Technology (IVR or SMS) booster session

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03928418
R01AA024990
U01AA024990 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The EXTEND study is a randomized controlled trial to compare the uptake and acceptability, efficacy, and cost of methods of delivery of an alcohol intervention in reducing unhealthy alcohol use and increasing viral suppression among HIV positive persons in Uganda. The study arms are (a) in-person counseling during 2 quarterly clinic visits plus live booster phone calls every three weeks in the interim (b) in-person counseling during 2 quarterly clinic visits plus tech (choice of SMS or IVR) boosters once to twice weekly in the interim; and (c) standard of care (SOC) control (brief unstructured advice, with a wait-listed intervention).

Full description

Alcohol consumption is a critical driver of HIV outcomes, especially in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where both are extremely common. Heavy alcohol use has been associated with reduced antiretroviral adherence, decreased HIV suppression, and increased mortality among those with HIV. Thus, reducing unhealthy alcohol use may improve HIV outcomes and is a high priority worldwide. Screening and brief counseling for alcohol use, especially multi-session approaches, have shown evidence for reducing alcohol use in resource rich settings and among persons with HIV. However, there are significant cost and human resource barriers to multiple session interventions in SSA, and it is not known whether alcohol interventions can improve HIV outcomes. Thus, the long-term goal of the EXTEND study is to develop and test interventions to reduce alcohol consumption and improve HIV outcomes, that can be feasibly integrated into routine HIV care in SSA.

Multi-session interventions that combine in-person visits with booster phone calls to reinforce the in-person counseling have shown good efficacy. Because cell phone use in Uganda is high, phone-based booster sessions conducted in-between the in-person sessions (that coincide with regularly scheduled clinic visits) may be feasible. However, phone-based booster sessions delivered by a live counselor ("live boosters") can be costly, time-consuming, limited to working hours, and dependent on good phone connections. Alternatively, automated cell phone-based booster sessions ("tech boosters"), can be conducted via interactive systems such as two-way Short Message Service (SMS, i.e. text messaging) or Interactive Voice Response (IVR) that allow for brief interactive sessions, with messages that are tailored to the participants' drinking goals and gender. Such automated tailored mobile phone-based interventions have been successful in improving several health behaviors in diverse populations. However, the uptake, acceptability, cost, and efficacy of live and tech booster calls for interventions for reducing alcohol use and improving HIV outcomes in SSA is not known. The investigators hypothesize that automated mobile phone-based technology can be leveraged as an efficacious way to implement multi-session alcohol interventions at a low burden and cost to both providers and patients in low resource settings.

Objectives

The EXTEND study is a randomized controlled trial (RCT) with a goal of estimating the uptake and acceptability, preliminary efficacy, and cost of methods of delivery of an intervention to reduce unhealthy drinking and HIV viral failure among persons in HIV care in rural Uganda (n=270). The RCT study arms are:

  1. in-person counseling during 2 quarterly clinic visits plus live booster phone calls every three weeks in the interim;
  2. in-person counseling during 2 quarterly clinic visits plus tech (choice of SMS or IVR) boosters once to twice weekly in the interim; and
  3. standard of care (SOC) control (brief unstructured advice, with a wait-listed intervention).

This study will be conducted in a large rural Ugandan HIV clinic. The end products of this study will be the preliminary comparisons of key outcomes to estimate effect sizes and inform the design of a future large-scale trial. The long-term aim is to implement interventions that reduce alcohol use and improve HIV outcomes feasibly and at low cost in low resource settings.

Enrollment

272 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 18 years and older;
  • HIV positive;
  • On ART for at least six months;
  • Reported alcohol use in the prior year at clinic entry;
  • Fluency in Runyakole;
  • Living within two hours travel time from the clinic;
  • Owning or having daily access to a cell phone;
  • Screening positive on the AUDIT-C

Exclusion criteria

  • Plans to move out of the catchment area within 6 months;
  • Unable to provide informed consent.
  • Participation in another research study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

272 participants in 3 patient groups

Live Phone Call Booster Arm
Experimental group
Description:
The live phone call arm will include in-person counseling during 2 quarterly clinic visits plus live booster phone calls every three weeks in the interim.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Live phone call booster session
Behavioral: In-person counseling session
Technology Booster Arm
Experimental group
Description:
The technology booster arm will include in-person counseling during 2 quarterly clinic visits plus tech (choice of SMS or IVR) boosters once to twice weekly in the interim.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Technology (IVR or SMS) booster session
Behavioral: In-person counseling session
Standard of Care (SOC) Arm
No Intervention group
Description:
The standard of care (SOC) control (brief unstructured advice, with a wait-listed intervention).

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems