Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02945436

Optimizing HIV Counseling and Testing and Referral Through an Adaptive Drug Use Intervention

Optimizing HIV Counseling and Testing and Referral Through an Adaptive Drug Use

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
258 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Michigan · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
15 Years – 29 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

A sample of 300 young (15-29) men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender persons living in South-East Michigan's Detroit Metro Area (DMA) will be recruited through venue-based sampling and online ads to examine the efficacy of adding a substance use brief intervention (SUBI) to standard HIV prevention and care (SOC) for achieving gains in successful engagement in HIV care. The investigators will partner with Detroit-area AIDS Service Organizations (ASOs) to deliver the intervention.

Detailed description

The research activities involve a prospective 4-arm factorial RCT (SOC-only, SOC+SUBI, SUBI+SOC, SUBI+SUBI) of approximately 300 ATOD-using high-risk YMSM aged 15-29 in the DMA. The intervention comprises of two intervention visits, at which time participants may get either standard of care only (SOC-only) or standard of care plus SUBI. All participants will receive standard of care (SOC; i.e., Comprehensive HIV Testing and Counseling) at each visit. The substance use brief intervention (SUBI) will be added to SOC within the experimental arms. At intervention visit one, standard of care is the same for all participants: standard of care is Counseling Testing and Referral (CTR).CTR is a standardized service in which counselors provide HIV testing, risk-related counseling and appropriate referrals (medical, social, prevention, and partner services) to clients. Hence at visit one, 150 YMSM will receive CTR and 150 YMSM will receive CTR+SUBI. The investigators expect approximately 10-15% of participants to test HIV positive at intervention visit one. For intervention visit two, standard of care is sero-status specific. For HIV-negatives standard of care remains CTR. For HIV-positives standard of care is case management, as offered routinely by each ASO, which involves counseling on linkage to care and the importance of care retention. To examine how the sequencing and dosing of interventions impacts efficacy, the investigators propose to randomize at baseline into a factorial randomized controlled trial. The control arm will receive SOC-only at both intervention visit one and two (SOC-only). Experimental arm one (SOC+SUBI) will receive SOC at visit one and SUBI at visit two. Experimental arm two (SUBI+SOC) will receive SUBI at visit one and SOC at visit two. Experimental arm three (SUBI+SUBI) will receive the intervention condition at visits one and two. The RCT thus answers two important questions: 1) What is the impact of the addition of SUBI to SOC on HIV engagement in care and sexual and substance-related risk-taking behaviors among high-risk YMSM? and 2) What combination of services (SOC-only, SOC+SUBI, SUBI+SOC, SUBI+SUBI) has the greatest impact on engagement in HIV prevention? (where engagement in care is defined as routine HIV testing for sero-negative YMSM and linkage/retention in care for sero-positive MSM).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSubstance Use Brief InterventionSUBI is a counseling intervention based on Motivational Interviewing techniques that focuses on the substance use and sexual health risks of participants.
BEHAVIORALStandard of Care (SOC)Standard of care is Counseling Testing and Referral (CTR). CTR is a standardized service in which counselors provide HIV testing, risk-related counseling and appropriate referrals (medical, social, prevention, and partner services) to clients.

Timeline

Start date
2017-04-07
Primary completion
2021-06-01
Completion
2021-06-01
First posted
2016-10-26
Last updated
2022-07-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02945436. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.