Study of Integrating Antiretroviral Therapy With Methadone Treatment for People Who Inject Drugs
- Conditions
- Opioid DependenceHIV
- Interventions
- Other: IMAT
- Registration Number
- NCT02167425
- Lead Sponsor
- Pangaea Global AIDS Foundation
- Brief Summary
To improve ART initiation among people who inject drugs, the investigators propose to develop and pilot a multi-component Integrated Methadone and Antiretroviral Therapy strategy (IMAT) in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. In doing so, the investigators anticipate building a functional model of methadone and ART integration that improves the effectiveness and efficiency of service delivery.
- Detailed Description
The overarching goal of the proposed research is to develop and test an innovative implementation model (IMAT) for the effective integration of HIV care and treatment with methadone services in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The investigators will utilize the PRECEDE framework to inform the intervention to improve linkage of HIV-positive methadone patients to ART. This model suggests that strategies intended to improve health care delivery should consider a combination of three factors: 1) 'predisposing factors' - characteristics such as knowledge, attitudes, beliefs and motivation to change, 2) 'enabling factors' - characteristics that enable someone to act on their desired behavior and 3) 'reinforcing factors' - factors that encourage repetition or persistence of behavior. Therefore, our IMAT approach uses 1) targeted education and mentoring for providers that predispose them to timely ART initiation, 2) POC CD4 count platforms (PIMA, Alere) providing real-time screening and results that enable ART initiation and 3) an alerts and reminder dashboard (e.g., a summary of key indicators for improved decision making) for providers that reinforce ART initiation. Additionally, our approach will lay the foundation for developing implementation strategies for future point-of-care technologies such as viral load.
The study will combine a mixture of qualitative and quantitative methodologies to inform and evaluate the IMAT intervention.
A baseline qualitative study using in-depth interviews will be conducted among providers and methadone clients to understand predisposing, enabling and reinforcing factors related to integration of HIV care and treatment into the methadone clinic. Information gained from these qualitative assessments will inform and support the IMAT strategy. In addition, HIV-positive methadone clients will be randomly selected to complete a baseline cross-sectional survey to collect data on patient satisfaction, access to HIV care, current treatment navigation access, and HIV care literacy.
The investigators will assess the effectiveness of IMAT with a quasi-experimental pre-post cohort design and a pre-post cross-sectional survey to examine changes in patient- and provider-level outcomes after implementation of IMAT compared to before IMAT. In addition, The investigators will assess the feasibility and acceptability of the IMAT strategy using a post-implementation cross-sectional survey with a particular emphasis on satisfaction with services; a time motion study to understand the timeliness of care provision; and in-depth interviews with patients and providers to understand experiences with the IMAT strategy.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 800
Methadone clients living with HIV but not linked to ART are the primary study population. Inclusion criteria for methadone initiation:
-
opioid dependence
-
positive urine screening for opiates.
Additional inclusion criteria include:
-
age ≥ 18 years of age
-
HIV-positive. Individuals must also be willing to provide informed consent and be fluent in Kiswahili or English to participate in cross-sectional surveys and in-depth interviews
We will exclude methadone clients from this study who have
- received ART prior to methadone initiation
- received a tuberculosis-positive diagnosis
- women who are pregnant. The investigators have excluded clients who have received ART in the past as their inclusion would bias our study results. The investigators have also excluded patients with a tuberculosis diagnosis or women who are pregnant as they have a unique and urgent need for treatment and should be initiated onto ART regardless of their CD4 count
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Late Post-IMAT Cohort IMAT Enrollment into the Late Post-IMAT Cohort will occur over a 9-month period in beginning in the second year of the intervention and will be followed by a 3-month period of follow-up after the close of enrollment. Early Post-IMAT Cohort IMAT Enrollment into the Early Post-IMAT Cohort will occur over a 9-month period immediately following the intervention and will be followed by a 3-month period of follow-up after the close of enrollment.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Time to CD4 Screening Up to 36 months Number of days between positive HIV test and CD4 screening. Extracted from routine clinical and laboratory monitoring data.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Percentage of clients that receive CD4 screening within 30 days of HIV-positive test Up to 36 months Collected via routine, programmatic data
Percentage of eligible (CD4<350) clients that initiate ART within 30 days of CD4 screening Up to 36 months Collected via routine, programmatic data
Percentage of clients on ART that receive at least 95% ART doses (i.e., adherence) Up to 36 months Collected via routine, programmatic data
Percentage of patients receiving HIV treatment navigation counseling from provider Three months pre-intervention and three months post-intervention Collected via cross-sectional surveys pre- and post-intervention.
Percentage of patients literate in CD4 screening process Three months pre-intervention and three months post-intervention Collected via cross-sectional surveys pre- and post-intervention.
Time to ART Initiation Up to 36 months Number of Days between receiving a qualifying CD4 count and first dose of ART. Extracted from routine clinical and laboratory monitoring data.
Provider Time to Ordering CD4 Screening Up to 36 months Collected via routine, programmatic data
Percentage of patients literate in ART Initiation process Three months pre-intervention and three months post-intervention Collected via cross-sectional surveys pre- and post-intervention.