Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02744261

Developing Rectal USPE Measures for Suppositories (Project DRUM-S)

Evaluating User Perceptions and Experiences of Dual Compartment Microbicide Formulations. Project 5.3: Developing Rectal USPE Measures for Suppositories (Project DRUM-S)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
32 (actual)
Sponsor
The Miriam Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to (a) adapt existing user sensory perception and experience (USPE) items/instruments generated for rectal gel/cream formulations to include USPEs specific to suppository forms for rectal and vaginal use; (b) for both male and female cohorts: to capture the experience of suppository use in the context of receptive anal intercourse (RAI); and (c) for female cohort only: to capture the experience of suppository use in the context of vaginal-penile intercourse (VI), and to compare USPEs of suppository use in the context of RAI to USPEs of suppository use in the context of vaginal-penile intercourse.

Detailed description

HIV prevention is a global public health priority. Providing efficacious prevention methods that have the greatest likelihood of use will have a profound impact on the public's health. Critical to their use is "acceptability." However, current conceptualizations of adherence and acceptability fail to fully articulate and account for patterns of use and non-use. Formulation properties are critically important to both drug delivery and the user experience. Microbicide developers thus have the opportunity to directly control a formulation's impact on acceptability and adherence to product use, as well as biological product performance. Microbicide products can and should be developed such that they achieve performance standards for both these behavioral (user experience) and biological (efficacy) functions. By incorporating the user experience early on in the product development process, developers will have the greatest chance of providing at-risk individuals with the best prevention methods science can provide. Developing prevention products that can be used in the vagina and/or the rectum and that optimize the user experience in both compartments increases the likelihood that these products will be used consistently and correctly. The impact on global public health has the potential to be far-reaching, decreasing HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STI) incidence and prevalence in both women and men. Methodology and Data Collection: This is a formative mixed methods design in which volunteers (N\~20-30; \~10-15 males; \~10-15 females) will first be prescreened for basic study eligibility using a brief questionnaire. Those who are interested in the study and are eligible based on their responses to the prescreen will then complete a STI/HIV screening and pregnancy test (for females). During the course of the study, participants will evaluate 3 products: 2 distinct suppository formulations and 1 gel formulation that represent a range of rheological and other biophysical properties of potential microbicides being designed for rectal/dual compartment use. Participants will evaluate the experience of suppository use (as compared to gel use) in the context of receptive anal intercourse (RAI) among males and females, and in the context of vaginal intercourse (VI) (females). Each participant will be randomly assigned to the order in which they will evaluate the 3 products. After a sexual encounter that includes RAI/VI and study product use, participants will be required to complete a web survey about their experience with the study product.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERGel4 mL
OTHERSuppository 1
OTHERSuppository 2

Timeline

Start date
2016-08-11
Primary completion
2017-04-13
Completion
2022-04-01
First posted
2016-04-20
Last updated
2026-02-10
Results posted
2026-02-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02744261. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.