Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05121064

Common Elements Treatment Approach HIV Alcohol Reduction Trial in Zambia

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
680 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Alabama at Birmingham · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study, which is part of the Zambia Alabama HIV Alcohol Comorbidities Program funded by NIH-NIAAA, is designed to examine the efficacy of brief and in-depth cognitive behavioral therapy-based interventions to address, unhealthy alcohol use, comorbid mental health symptoms, and HIV treatment outcomes among people living with HIV in Zambia. A 3-arm trial will be conducted with participants randomized to a brief intervention alone, the brief intervention plus referral to Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA), or standard of care (SOC).

Detailed description

People with HIV are a priority population for alcohol screening and treatment; however, they may be more likely to underreport their alcohol use and may respond less well to alcohol treatments due to untreated comorbidities. Psychological treatments for unhealthy alcohol use should ideally include components to address common mental health and other substance use comorbidities. However, few current treatments can treat both substance use and mental illness with a single protocol. Further, whether integrated treatment of unhealthy alcohol use and its comorbidities is more effective than alcohol-focused treatment alone needs to be established. There are psychological alcohol treatments that are consider brief interventions (BI), which are time limited and require fewer resources to implement. There are also more complex interventions that require multiple sessions with a provider and are more time and resource intensive; however, they may have more potential for short- and long-term effectiveness. In this study we will examine the efficacy of both a brief intervention (BI) alone and a more comprehensive and involving the BI followed by Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA; www.cetaglobal.org) among adults with unhealthy alcohol use and HIV in urban Zambia. CETA is a transdiagnostic cognitive behavioral therapy-based intervention that can flexibly treat a range of conditions including substance use, depression, posttraumatic stress, and anxiety. Further, CETA can be delivered by professional and lay providers. There is already evidence that CETA can reduce alcohol use in the general population in Zambia. In pilot study, the BI plus CETA reduced alcohol use and mental health symptoms more at 6 months than the BI alone. Whether the BI is superior to standard of care (SOC), antiretroviral therapy adherence counseling, is not known. This study will build on existing knowledge by looking at longer-term effects (12 months) of the interventions, assess impact on HIV outcomes (adherence to antiretrovirals, retention in HIV care, viral suppression), and to understand whether the BI is superior to current SOC. In the study, we will also evaluate implementation factors related to delivery of the two interventions within public sector HIV clinics. Understanding how to implement interventions for unhealthy alcohol use and mental illness is a major priority in the field. We will have several groups of participants: * 1 Adults with HIV and unhealthy alcohol use- this group will be enrolled and randomly assigned to one of three Arms (A, B or C) of the study. Arm A will receive alcohol brief intervention (BI), Arm B alcohol brief intervention (BI) plus referral to Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA), or Arm C standard of care (SOC). The participants in Arm A will receive the single session alcohol brief intervention (BI). Participants in Arm B will also receive the BI and then be referred for CETA, which includes 6-12 sessions with a provider. The participants in Arm C will receive standard of care (SOC) only. All participants will be re-assessed at 6 and 12 months post-enrollment. Patients who participate will provide data on alcohol use, mental health and other substance use comorbidities, and HIV outcomes. Data will be generated through surveys and in some cases through laboratory tests (blood and urine). CETA will be provided by HIV peer counselors, a cadre of lay health worker that supports HIV care delivery at facilities in Zambia. * 2 CETA counselors- this group will be enrolled and their competency to provide the intervention will be assessed through role plays. Further, they will be included in focus group discussions to understand experiences delivering CETA at HIV clinics. * 3 Clinic staff- these individuals will be HIV care providers at the study clinics and they will be invited to focus group discussions so we can understand their perspectives on integration of interventions into their clinics. * 4 Key informants- these are high-level policymakers and HIV and mental health/substance use policy makers and experts in Zambia who can guide us on understanding how to scale up study interventions should they be effective.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALAlcohol Brief InterventionThe alcohol brief intervention (BI) was based on CETA'S substance use module and was designed for one-on-one delivery. It is comprised of 6 elements (i.e. assessment, understanding impacts, exploring possibilities of change, goal setting, identifying reasons for alcohol use and skill building) including a 2-week alcohol timeline follow back assessment completed by provider. The alcohol brief intervention (BI) will be conducted by a trained counselor.
BEHAVIORALCommon Elements Treatment ApproachCETA is a multisession cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)-based model. CETA consists of elements: engagement, safety assessment, psychoeducation, substance use reduction, behavioral activation, cognitive coping, relaxation, exposure and problem solving. During a weekly clinic meeting, newly enrolled participants who are assigned to get CETA will be assigned to a specific counselor. The counsellor, together with their supervisor, will design an individualized treatment plan including type and order of Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA) for each participant. The counsellor will contact participants by phone or home visit to schedule CETA session. CETA sessions will begin with standardized clinical monitoring form to track progress of treatment and each session will last 45-90 minutes.
BEHAVIORALStandard of CareStandard of Care (SOC) at HIV clinics in Zambia consist of Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) adherence counselling. All participants will receive Standard of Care (SOC), but for participants in Arm C it will be the only alcohol treatment. The ART adherence counseling includes brief unstructured discussion of substance use and mental health issues with a focus on issues that reduce adherence and retention issues. ART adherence counseling is delivered in a one-on-one format between patient and counsellor and it usually lasts 5-10 minutes.

Timeline

Start date
2023-01-24
Primary completion
2025-10-31
Completion
2025-10-31
First posted
2021-11-16
Last updated
2026-01-08

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Zambia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05121064. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.