NCT04549259

Brief Summary

Engagement in HIV medical care and adherence to HIV medications are both essential in improving health outcomes among people living with HIV (PLH), but PLH living in rural areas-who suffer higher mortality rates than their urban counterparts-can confront multiple barriers to care engagement and adherence, especially as they face the logistical, medical, and social challenges associated with aging. This project will pilot test four intervention components designed to improve care engagement and medication adherence to determine their impact on health outcomes and quality of life among rural, older PLH. The four intervention components, adapted from evidence-based interventions and delivered remotely, are: (1) counselor-facilitated peer social support, (2) HIV stigma reduction, (3) strengths-based case management, and (4) individually-tailored technology use optimization. The investigators hypothesize that components will be acceptable to participants, will be feasible to administer remotely, and will show preliminary impact on (1) the proportion of participants that have viral suppression and (2) health-related quality of life. Results from this study will provide us with tools to improve health outcomes for rural older people living with HIV.

Trial Health

87
On Track

Trial Health Score

Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach

Enrollment
61

participants targeted

Target at below P25 for not_applicable hiv

Timeline
Completed

Started Apr 2021

Shorter than P25 for not_applicable hiv

Geographic Reach
1 country

1 active site

Status
completed

Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.

Trial Relationships

Click on a node to explore related trials.

Study Timeline

Key milestones and dates

First Submitted

Initial submission to the registry

September 1, 2020

Completed
15 days until next milestone

First Posted

Study publicly available on registry

September 16, 2020

Completed
7 months until next milestone

Study Start

First participant enrolled

April 14, 2021

Completed
1.1 years until next milestone

Primary Completion

Last participant's last visit for primary outcome

May 9, 2022

Completed
Same day until next milestone

Study Completion

Last participant's last visit for all outcomes

May 9, 2022

Completed
1.2 years until next milestone

Results Posted

Study results publicly available

July 12, 2023

Completed
Last Updated

July 12, 2023

Status Verified

June 1, 2023

Enrollment Period

1.1 years

First QC Date

September 1, 2020

Results QC Date

May 23, 2023

Last Update Submit

June 20, 2023

Conditions

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcomes (2)

  • Proportion of Participants With HIV Viral Load ≥832 Copies/mL (HemaSpot DBS)

    Proportion of participants with HIV viral load ≥832 copies/mL, as measured through use of HemaSpot dried blood spot (DBS) testing. At baseline and follow-up, participants were sent dried blood spot (DBS) kits by mail to complete self-collection of blood samples for HIV viral load testing. Following specimen collection, participants placed the filled HemaSpot container into the shipping envelope, which sent the specimen directly to the clinical laboratory for testing. HemaSpot devices with sufficient blood volume were tested using Abbott m2000 RealTime HIV-1 dried blood spot (DBS) quantitative assay, with 832 copies/mL limit of detection. DBS viral load results were classified in three categories: 1. Detected and quantifiable at ≥832 copies/mL; 2. Detected and non-quantifiable, estimated between \<832 and \>300 copies/mL; and 3. Not detected, estimated to be \<300 copies/mL.

    3 months following enrollment/baseline survey

  • Health-Related Quality of Life

    Based on full scale scores from the 31-item WHOQOL-HIV BREF (O'Connell \& Skevington, 2012), with scores ranging from 0 to 100. Higher scores indicate higher (better) quality of life. Quality of life was assessed with 31 items from the WHOQOL-HIV BREF (O'Connell \& Skevington, 2012). Domains assessed include physical health; psychological health; level of independence; social relationships; environmental health; and personal beliefs. Additionally, two individual items focus on overall quality of life and general health. Domain scores were created as described by the WHO, and we created a composite quality of life score by equally weighting the 6 domains, overall quality of life item, and general health item. The composite score was rescaled such that overall scores ranged from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating better health-related quality of life.

    3 months following enrollment/baseline survey

Secondary Outcomes (2)

  • Medication Adherence

    3 months following enrollment/baseline survey

  • Depressive Symptoms

    3 months following enrollment/baseline survey

Study Arms (16)

Social Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCM + Tech Detailing

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Group-Based Social SupportBehavioral: HIV Stigma ReductionBehavioral: Strengths-Based Case Management (SBCM)Behavioral: Personalized Technology Detailing

Social Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCM

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Group-Based Social SupportBehavioral: HIV Stigma ReductionBehavioral: Strengths-Based Case Management (SBCM)

Social Support + Stigma Reduction + Technology Detailing

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Group-Based Social SupportBehavioral: HIV Stigma ReductionBehavioral: Personalized Technology Detailing

Social Support + Stigma Reduction

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Group-Based Social SupportBehavioral: HIV Stigma Reduction

Social Support + SBCM + Technology Detailing

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Group-Based Social SupportBehavioral: Strengths-Based Case Management (SBCM)Behavioral: Personalized Technology Detailing

Social Support + SBCM

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Group-Based Social SupportBehavioral: Strengths-Based Case Management (SBCM)

Social Support + Technology Detailing

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Group-Based Social SupportBehavioral: Personalized Technology Detailing

Social Support

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Group-Based Social Support

Stigma Reduction + SBCM + Technology Detailing

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: HIV Stigma ReductionBehavioral: Strengths-Based Case Management (SBCM)Behavioral: Personalized Technology Detailing

Stigma Reduction + SBCM

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: HIV Stigma ReductionBehavioral: Strengths-Based Case Management (SBCM)

Stigma Reduction + Technology Detailing

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: HIV Stigma ReductionBehavioral: Personalized Technology Detailing

Stigma Reduction

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: HIV Stigma Reduction

SBCM + Technology Detailing

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Strengths-Based Case Management (SBCM)Behavioral: Personalized Technology Detailing

SBCM

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Strengths-Based Case Management (SBCM)

Technology Detailing

EXPERIMENTAL
Behavioral: Personalized Technology Detailing

HIV Information Only

NO INTERVENTION

This arm will not receive any of the 4 intervention components but will receive information on successfully aging with HIV.

Interventions

This intervention involves weekly support group calls facilitated by a licensed counselor or therapist for 8 consecutive weeks. The calls will last approximately 90 minutes and will include 5-8 individuals per group. Groups will follow pre-determined topic areas, with participants encouraged to explore their feelings about the difficulties associated with normal aging, being HIV-positive, and living with HIV/AIDS as an older adult. Therapists will facilitate mutual support among group members, encourage greater openness and emotional expressiveness, and help participants to improve their social and family support and enhance their quality of life. This intervention is an adaptation of Telephone Supportive-Expressive Group Therapy (Heckman et al., 2013).

Social SupportSocial Support + SBCMSocial Support + SBCM + Technology DetailingSocial Support + Stigma ReductionSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCMSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCM + Tech DetailingSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + Technology DetailingSocial Support + Technology Detailing

This intervention involves weekly support group calls facilitated by a licensed counselor or therapist for 6 consecutive weeks. The calls will last approximately 60-90 minutes and will include 5-8 individuals per group. This intervention is grounded in minority stress theory and will use cognitive-behavioral strategies to help empower participants to cope with stressful and stigmatizing experiences. Intervention components may include minimizing self-stigmatizing attitudes, reducing engulfment, developing a sense of future and hope, and developing and pursuing meaningful life goals. This intervention is an adaptation of "Ending Self Stigma" (Lucksted et al., 2011).

Social Support + Stigma ReductionSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCMSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCM + Tech DetailingSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + Technology DetailingStigma ReductionStigma Reduction + SBCMStigma Reduction + SBCM + Technology DetailingStigma Reduction + Technology Detailing

The investigators have adapted an individually-tailored strengths-based case management (SBCM) intervention to help address the multiple structural barriers faced by rural older PLH. The adapted intervention, delivered by trained research staff, will include two 60-minute telephone-based SBCM counseling sessions with shorter follow-up phone calls to check-in on progress and help patients navigate identified barriers. The case manager will provide tailored sessions based on individually-identified needs and proximal life stressors. Capitalizing on participants' personal strengths, case managers will help empower participants to navigate issues related to employment, insurance, mental health, housing, or transportation. This may include assistance understanding, applying for, and accessing benefits or programs.

SBCMSBCM + Technology DetailingSocial Support + SBCMSocial Support + SBCM + Technology DetailingSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCMSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCM + Tech DetailingStigma Reduction + SBCMStigma Reduction + SBCM + Technology Detailing

Participants will be called by a technology-fluent study staff member, who will assess the current state of their technology literacy, access, and use. Detailing will focus on advancing the participant along the technology use cascade (using the internet, possessing a device and service to access internet at home, using the internet to access their electronic health record and pharmacy services, seeking HIV-related information, and finding social support). Each participant will be provided with personalized assistance based on their local and personal circumstances. Because of the individualized advice provided, there will be a range of contacts between 1 and 5, at customized intervals. Detailing protocols include the option of providing the participant with a tablet including cellular service (for 3 months) when in-home internet service is not available or is cost prohibitive.

SBCM + Technology DetailingSocial Support + SBCM + Technology DetailingSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + SBCM + Tech DetailingSocial Support + Stigma Reduction + Technology DetailingSocial Support + Technology DetailingStigma Reduction + SBCM + Technology DetailingStigma Reduction + Technology DetailingTechnology Detailing

Eligibility Criteria

Age50 Years+
Sexall
Healthy VolunteersNo
Age GroupsAdult (18-64), Older Adult (65+)

You may qualify if:

  • Age 50 years or greater
  • Living in a zip code classified as a "Small and Isolated Small Rural Town" area by Rural-Urban Commuting Area Codes (RUCAs), and/or in a county classified as rural based on RUCAs, and/or in a county with a score of .4 or higher on the index of relative rurality (IRR)
  • Living in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina, or Tennessee
  • Living with HIV
  • Indicates willingness to participate in support groups
  • Indicates willingness to self-collect a dried blood spot sample
  • Has a telephone at home
  • Able to provide informed consent

You may not qualify if:

  • Not meeting eligibility criteria described above

Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.

Sponsors & Collaborators

Study Sites (1)

Center for AIDS Intervention Research, Medical College of Wisconsin

Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53202, United States

Location

Related Publications (3)

  • Wilson IB, Lee Y, Michaud J, Fowler FJ Jr, Rogers WH. Validation of a New Three-Item Self-Report Measure for Medication Adherence. AIDS Behav. 2016 Nov;20(11):2700-2708. doi: 10.1007/s10461-016-1406-x.

    PMID: 27098408BACKGROUND
  • Kroenke K, Spitzer RL, Williams JB. The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure. J Gen Intern Med. 2001 Sep;16(9):606-13. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.2001.016009606.x.

    PMID: 11556941BACKGROUND
  • O'Connell KA, Skevington SM. An international quality of life instrument to assess wellbeing in adults who are HIV-positive: a short form of the WHOQOL-HIV (31 items). AIDS Behav. 2012 Feb;16(2):452-60. doi: 10.1007/s10461-010-9863-0.

    PMID: 21181253BACKGROUND

Results Point of Contact

Title
Dr. Jennifer Walsh and Dr. Andrew Petroll
Organization
Center for AIDS Intervention Research, Medical College of Wisconsin

Study Officials

  • Jennifer Walsh, PhD

    Center for AIDS Intervention Research, Medical College of Wisconsin

    PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
  • Andrew Petroll, MD

    Center for AIDS Intervention Research, Medical College of Wisconsin

    PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR

Publication Agreements

PI is Sponsor Employee
No
Restrictive Agreement
No

Study Design

Study Type
interventional
Phase
not applicable
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Purpose
TREATMENT
Intervention Model
FACTORIAL
Sponsor Type
OTHER
Responsible Party
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
PI Title
Associate Professor

Study Record Dates

First Submitted

September 1, 2020

First Posted

September 16, 2020

Study Start

April 14, 2021

Primary Completion

May 9, 2022

Study Completion

May 9, 2022

Last Updated

July 12, 2023

Results First Posted

July 12, 2023

Record last verified: 2023-06

Data Sharing

IPD Sharing
Will not share

Locations