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Video-Intervention to Inspire Treatment Adherence for Life for Adolescents

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
HIV/AIDS
Registration Number
NCT07064785
Lead Sponsor
Baylor College of Medicine
Brief Summary

This a two-arm randomized controlled trial whose objective is to explore the impact of VITAL Start for Adolescents (VS4A), a video-based antiretroviral treatment (ART) adherence intervention, on a range of implementation and effectiveness outcomes. The study will be conducted in health facilities which provide HIV care to teens/adolescents in the Machinga and Balaka districts of Malawi with approximately 900 teens living with HIV and their treatment supporters (dyads). Dyads will be individually randomized on a 1:1 ratio to receive either the intervention or the standard of care. The VS4A intervention is designed to support Information, Motivation, and Behavioral skills (IMB) around adolescent ART adherence as well as strategies for enhancing treatment supporter social support. The intervention consists of: 1) a two-session video package with associated activities that both the adolescent and their treatment supporter will be asked to watch and participate in; 2) ART refill for the adolescent; 3) and intensive adherence counselling for those with a high viral load. The primary outcomes are adoption of the intervention and adolescent viral load suppression. Our overall hypothesis is that VS4A will achieve high adoption and improve adolescent viral suppression.

Detailed Description

Adolescents living with HIV (ALHIV)-an estimated 1.7 million globally-face ongoing challenges with HIV medication adherence, retention, and viral load suppression (VLS). With both high rates of incident infection and some of the lowest VLS rates, ALHIV experience high mortality with approximately 100 deaths per day. Successful interventions to improve retention and VLS among ALHIV in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) remain limited. Video-based counseling interventions have improved HIV knowledge, disclosure, and treatment adherence in other populations and offer a scalable way to deliver standardized content while reducing health care worker burden. Yet, they remain underused for ALHIV in sub-Saharan Africa.

Our team piloted one of the first video-based interventions integrated into HIV care in Malawi. Preliminary findings showed high satisfaction among patients and providers, as well as improvements in ART knowledge, adherence, and retention. Building on these results, we propose to adapt and evaluate VITAL Start (Video-intervention to Inspire Treatment Adherence for Life) for Adolescents (VS4A), a video-based counseling package tailored for ALHIV.

Through a two-arm randomized controlled trial, the aim is to assess the impact of VS4A on implementation and clinical outcomes. Adolescent-treatment supporters from up to 26 health facilities in Malawi will be randomized to receive either the VS4 intervention or the standard of care (SOC). Implementation outcomes will be compared between the VS4A arm and the standard of care arm. The effectiveness outcome of adolescent viral suppression will be compared between the two arms.

The findings from this trial will provide an intervention that standardizes and improves knowledge and behavior at critical teaching moments through an engaging and culturally sensitive experience and inform scalable strategies to improve adolescent HIV care and advance progress toward long-term viral suppression and well-being for ALHIV.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1800
Inclusion Criteria
  • 10-19 years of age
  • In care at the health facility
  • Aware of their HIV status
  • Provide informed consent (if aged 18+ years) or assent and guardian informed consent (if aged 10-17 years).
Exclusion Criteria

if their ability to provide informed consent or assent is impaired

Treatment supporters

Inclusion Criteria:

  • >18 years old
  • named as a treatment supporter of an adolescent study participant
  • willing to provide informed consent for oneself
  • Exclusion Criteria: if their ability to provide informed consent is impaired

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Adolescent Viral Load MeasureBy 47 weeks

Adolescents will have their viral load assessed via dried blood spot. Results will be analyzed and those with a result of \<1000 copies/ml will be considered virally suppressed. All others will be considered non-suppressed: \>=1000 copies/ml or having no viral load measurement, lost, or died.

Adoption of VS4 intervention at teen clubBy Week 24

Proportion of health facilities in the experimental arm that participated in implementation strategy.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Adolescent behavioral adherenceBy Week 36

Mean based on behavioral adherence scale

ReachBy Week 12

Proportion of eligible adolescents who enrolled in the study compared to the health facility register

Implementation fidelityBy Week 24

Proportion of adolescents and treatment supporters in the experimental arm who completed all activities.

Trial Locations

Locations (32)

Balaka District Hospital

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Balaka OPD Health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Chiendausiku Health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Kalembo Health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Kwitanda Health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Mbera health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Namanolo Health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Nandumbo Health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Phalula Health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

Phimbi Health Centre

🇲🇼

Balaka, Malawi

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Balaka District Hospital
🇲🇼Balaka, Malawi
Tapiwa Tembo, MSc
Contact
+265 999 970 033
ttembo@tingathe.org

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