Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02921516

Growing Up: Intervening With HIV-Positive Adolescents in Resource-Poor Settings

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
278 (actual)
Sponsor
Florida International University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
15 Years – 19 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Despite overall declines in HIV incidence and mortality since ART scale-up in low and middle income countries, both have risen among youth. In addition, HIV-infected youth achieve inferior treatment outcomes compared to their adult counterparts in both high- and low-income countries, and these poorer outcomes are generally attributed to suboptimal adherence. Thus, there is a critical need for the development of adherence and risk reduction interventions for the growing cohort of these youth, and the proposed cognitive behavioral N'ap Grandi is one such intervention.

Detailed description

As pediatric HIV infection has shifted from being a fatal disease to a chronic illness, a growing cohort of young people are moving through adolescence with all the challenges of the adult HIV-infected population but largely without comparable treatment outcomes or an evidence base to improve adherence to antiretroviral treatment (ART) and preventive behavior. Despite overall declines in HIV incidence and mortality since the ART scale-up, both have risen among youth. The goal of the proposed 3-year R34 developmental study is to respond to this need for tailored research, in particular among HIV+ older adolescents, and contribute to understanding the added value in resource-limited settings of including caregivers in an adherence and risk reduction program. Although caregiver involvement is a recognized correlate of outcomes in HIV+ youth, there are no rigorous studies of the role of caregivers in outcomes among HIV+ older adolescents.This project will integrate caregiver involvement and cognitive behavioral intervention (CBI) elements to improve ART adherence and HIV risk reduction for HIV+ older adolescents treated in resource-poor clinical settings.Our proposed study population will include caregivers and 15 to 19 year-old HIV+ youth who know their status and are receiving ART in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Guided by the theoretical framework of the developmentally sensitive Information-Motivation-Behavioral Skills for Pediatric Adherence (IMB-PED), we will develop Growing Up (N'ap Grandi, in Haitian Creole) as a collaborative model of caregiver-adolescent engagement in the key informational, motivational, and behavioral skills antecedents of ART adherence and risk reduction. The study will utilize qualitative and quantitative methods to: identify barriers and facilitators to adherence and risk reduction (Aim 1); develop and pretest N'ap Grandi, including developmentally-appropriate manuals, training materials, procedures, and psychometric adequacy of measures (Aim 2); and assess feasibility and preliminary efficacy in a 3-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT), in which 120 youth will be assigned to three groups: the experimental caregiver-adolescent N'ap Grandi, an adolescent-only version (N'ap Grandi-A) and an adolescent-only health promotion group (HP-A), examining ART adherence and virologic response, HIV risk behaviors, positive communication and monitoring, stress and mood, and costs from the health center perspective (Aim 3).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALN'ap GrandiEight 90-minute adolescent cognitive behavioral modules and four 90-minute caregiver cognitive behavioral modules, delivered in weekend workshops over a 1 month period, with the last two modules for joint participation of adolescents and caregivers.
BEHAVIORALN'ap Grandi - AEight 90-minute adolescent cognitive behavioral modules delivered in weekend workshops over a 1 month period.
BEHAVIORALHealth Promotion - AEight 90-minute adolescent health promotion modules delivered in weekend workshops over a 1 month period.

Timeline

Start date
2016-09-01
Primary completion
2018-05-01
Completion
2018-05-01
First posted
2016-10-03
Last updated
2018-07-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Haiti

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02921516. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.