Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05294159

Implementing Long-Acting Novel Antiretrovirals

Implementing Long-Acting Novel Antiretrovirals - the ILANA Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
114 (actual)
Sponsor
Queen Mary University of London · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a 12-month, dual arm, phase 4, open-label, multi-centre study examining the implementation of LA intra-muscular (IM) drugs in clinics and decentralised community-based settings in the UK.

Detailed description

Cabotegravir and Rilpivirine (CAB+RPV) LA, is recommended in European US and British guidelines as a treatment for HIV-1 that allows PWH to receive a two-monthly injectable treatment, rather than daily pills. Providing injectable therapy in a system designed to provide and manage patients on oral treatments poses logistical challenges namely how resources are used to accommodate patient preference within a constrained health economy with capacity limitations. Exploring the use of alternative settings for injection, including community-based settings to deliver CAB+RPV LA, has the potential to expand options and potentially improve clinic capacity. Many PWH report high levels of stigma when attending the HIV clinic which can affect engagement with care, so receiving care in a community setting may provide additional choices and the possibility of receiving treatment in a less medicalized setting. Implementation studies in Europe are also assessing this in their countries. The National Health Service (NHS) in the UK is a very specific health environment where people are entitled to treatment and care which is free at the point of delivery. Unlike other medical specialties where primary care physicians are responsible for prescribing treatment for chronic conditions, PWH are managed and receive their HIV treatment in HIV and sexual health clinics. For the circa 105K people with HIV in the UK, outcomes are excellent. More than 95% of those on treatment have undetectable viral loads. However, around 8100 people in the UK are not able to take oral ART successfully. US guidelines have specified that LA CAB+ RPV is particularly important for those who experience pill fatigue, stigma and have fears of inadvertent disclosure. This is highly relevant to the ethnically diverse population of people in the UK living with HIV, many of whom come from marginalized and minoritized communities in which stigma is rife and in whom the treatment outcomes are the poorest. Women, racially minoritized people and older people are chronically under-represented in HIV clinical trials which is why we have set recruitment caps to ensure we recruit 50% women, 50% ethnically diverse people and 30% over 50 years of age. This is to ensure that we go beyond lip-service and hold ourselves to account in designing our trials with peer researcher involvement from the outset and committing to include a more representative study population. We will achieve this by engaging actively with community organisations to ensure awareness of this implementation trials. The study will be conducted at six large clinic sites both in London and outside of London. In this pragmatic real-world trial, each site will identify the most workable option to deliver of CAB+RPV LA according to SmPC license in the community setting within their region or borough.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERThe Feasibility of Intervention Measure (FIM) and Acceptability of Intervention Measure (AIM)The Feasibility and Acceptability of Intervention Measure (FIM and AIM) are used to evaluate the feasibilit and acceptability of our implementation strategies. The FIM and AIM is a validated implementation outcome measure where higher scores indicate greater feasibility and acceptability

Timeline

Start date
2022-07-18
Primary completion
2023-12-22
Completion
2023-12-22
First posted
2022-03-24
Last updated
2024-07-08

Locations

6 sites across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05294159. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.