Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Active Not Recruiting

Active Not RecruitingNCT04832477

Assessing the PrEP Care Cascade Among Black Men and Transwomen in the Southeastern US

PrEP Connected Study

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
500 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Connecticut · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The proposed research aims to assess the multiple forms and paths of stigma and substance use as they relate to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use for HIV prevention. How stigma and an evolving public health landscape impact PrEP use among Black sexual minorit men who use substances is unknown. The current application focuses on addressing critical and novel questions to improving the essential building blocks of biomedical prevention approaches by providing crucial information for enhancing interventions to lower HIV prevalence among substance using Black sexual minority men.

Detailed description

HIV incidence among Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) in the southeastern United States is one of the highest in the world. Our research team has conducted studies with BMSM in Atlanta that have demonstrated 35% HIV prevalence and over 5% annual HIV incidence. Although PrEP is highly effective for preventing HIV transmission, it is not reaching BMSM. The failures in our ability to engage BMSM in PrEP use are highly problematic given the alarming rates of HIV transmission among this group. Of particular concern is the impact of substance use as a barrier in PrEP linkage, uptake, adherence, and persistence. Substance use is common among BMSM in our study, with 43% (n=204/474) reporting recent substance use. Further complicating PrEP use is the potential impact of COVID-19 on health care access, health care infrastructure, and sex behavior. The need to better understand PrEP use in the context of our new health care landscape is critical to making advances in PrEP use. At this point, assessing how substance use impacts PrEP use is challenging because PrEP implementation is so low among this group. The current study aims to provide substance using BMSM with evidence-based PrEP engagement counseling to address barriers to accessing PrEP (not for intervention testing, but for facilitating PrEP use) and to assess the multiple forms and paths of stigma and substance use as they relate to PrEP linkage, uptake, adherence, and persistence. The investigators propose using the HIV Stigma Framework as a conceptual model for investigating the intersecting pathways of stigma drivers and stigma mechanisms as they relate to PrEP use among substance using BMSM. Aim 1: Enroll a prospective cohort of N=500 BMSM who test HIV negative and test substance use positive on toxicology testing, and provide evidence-based PrEP engagement counseling to facilitate access to PrEP care. Aim 2: Conduct psychosocial and health care access assessments every 2-months for 18-months, and conduct HIV/STI testing and dried blood spot testing for TFV-DP every 3-months for 18-months. Aim 3: Using data collected from Aims 1 and 2, model stigma pathways of advancing and reverting along the PrEP cascade (i.e., linkage, uptake, adherence, persistence), with these pathways mediated by health care access and moderated by substance use. Achieving the aims will provide critical insight for translating and adapting interventions to enhance potency and durability for individuals at exceedingly elevated risk for HIV.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALStigma counseling for PrEP useThis counseling consists of a single-session (45 minute) delivered by trained peer counselors. The primary aims and relevant content areas for counseling are: (1) Assessing and discussing factors known to be drivers of emotional barriers to accessing health care. This counseling aim has two main sub-components: (a) participants will be asked about their prior experiences with accessing health care and their concerns regarding future access, and (b) the counseling will focus on creating personal agency around needing to prioritize one's health. (2) Evaluating concerns around discussing PrEP with health care providers. The counseling combines motivational interviewing with medical decisional balance, which focuses on points to consider when evaluating PrEP. (3) Promoting resiliency beliefs and positive adaptation. For this objective the counselor works with the participant to establish PrEP use goals and problem-solving strategies.

Timeline

Start date
2021-09-15
Primary completion
2026-02-04
Completion
2026-02-04
First posted
2021-04-05
Last updated
2025-07-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04832477. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.