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Youth Engagement Study: Intervention to Increase HIV Treatment Engagement and Adherence for Young People Living With HIV (YES)

University of Connecticut logo

University of Connecticut

Status

Completed

Conditions

HIV/AIDS

Treatments

Behavioral: Youth Engagement in Services

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03665532
H16-130

Details and patient eligibility

About

This pragmatic adaptive clinical trial will test the effects of a Stigma-Motivational-Decision intervention designed to increase HIV treatment engagement, retention, and medication adherence for substance using adolescents and young adults (AYA) living with HIV who are not in clinical care. The intervention uses a uniquely unified counseling approach at multiple points along the HIV continuum of care. The trial will use multiple modes of outreach including social media, passive media, clinic records, and chain referrals to seek and identify HIV positive AYA who are HIV untreated, under-dosed, or unsuppressed (HIV-U3). Participants will receive phone-delivered Stigma-Motivational-Decision counseling intervention sessions to achieve engagement or re-engagement in HIV care, treatment adherence and control of their HIV infection. Once viral control is achieved, participants will receive a low-cost approach to sustaining long-term retention in care and medication adherence.

Full description

This pragmatic adaptive clinical trial will test the effects of a Stigma-Motivational-Decision intervention designed to increase HIV treatment engagement, retention, and antiretroviral (Art) medication adherence for substance using adolescents and young adults (AYA) living with HIV who are not in clinical care. The intervention uses a uniquely unified counseling approach at multiple points along the HIV continuum of care. In a first step, the study will use multiple modes of outreach including social media, passive media, clinic records, and chain referrals to seek and identify HIV positive AYA who are HIV untreated, under-dosed, or unsuppressed (HIV-U3). Identified AYA will be enrolled in a run-in to the trial to objectively confirm the following criteria for trial entry. In Step 2, Individuals who meet entry criteria -specifically - substance using HIV-U3 AYA - will be enrolled in a mobile health (mHealth) intervention to address substance use, HIV stigmas, medical care-related concerns, structural barriers, and other challenges to engaging youth in HIV care. Counseling will be provided weekly by cellphone until the time participants are receiving ART, adequately dosed on ART, and HIV suppressed within a maximum of 12 sessions (up to 3-months). The study will therefore determine the number of theory-based mHealth intervention sessions needed (minimally effective dose) for optimal treatment outcomes and the associated costs. Once engaged and optimally treated, Step 3 will conduct a randomized trial to test the comparative effects and cost effectiveness of two interventions to sustain long-term retention in care and medication adherence: (a) interactive text messaging with opportunities for ongoing supportive problem solving vs. (b) passive text message reminders. HIV positive AYA are likely to drop out of care because of known challenges such as substance use, social barriers such as stigma, and concerns regarding treatment. The 3-step study will use a single theory-based approach to determine the number of phone-delivered Stigma-Motivational-Decision counseling intervention sessions necessary to achieve engagement or re-engagement in HIV care, and will test the effects of a low-cost approach to sustaining long-term retention in care and medication adherence. The study will determine the minimally effective amount of counseling needed to engage substance using HIV positive AYA in care. The study will also test the effects of the counseling and text messaging interventions on maintaining HIV care retention, medication adherence, and HIV viral suppression over 18-months. The study will perform economic evaluations to determine the cost-effectiveness of the engagement-retention-adherence intervention and the effects of low-burden retention/adherence interventions to maintain retention in care and avoid relapse to non-adherence for AYA living with HIV.

Enrollment

400 patients

Sex

All

Ages

16 to 35 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age between 16 years and 35 years

  • HIV positive

  • At least one of the following:

    • Active substance using
    • HIV untreated
    • Under-dosed with ART
    • HIV viral unsuppressed

Exclusion criteria

  • Not HIV positive
  • Younger than 16
  • Older than 35 years of age

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

400 participants in 2 patient groups

Interactive 2-way texting
Experimental group
Description:
Biweekly text message communications with counselors for problem solving
Treatment:
Behavioral: Youth Engagement in Services
Passive text reminders
Active Comparator group
Description:
Automated weekly text message health care reminders
Treatment:
Behavioral: Youth Engagement in Services

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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