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Using Telehealth to Address Alcohol Misuse in HIV Care

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Alcohol Drinking
HIV Viremia
Interventions
Behavioral: Brief Intervention
Behavioral: Telehealth Counseling
Behavioral: Text messaging
Registration Number
NCT04546971
Lead Sponsor
Brown University
Brief Summary

This project will test the effects of a telehealth counseling program on reducing alcohol use and improving HIV viral control among people with HIV who drink heavily. In total, 600 heavy drinkers with HIV will be assigned to either (a) a single session of brief counseling on alcohol use or (b) brief counseling plus referral to a telehealth counseling program that includes multiple sessions of counseling by videoconferencing and text messaging support. To understand the effects of the program, participants' alcohol use, HIV outcomes, and health will be assessed over a 2-year period.

Detailed Description

The purpose of the proposed study is to test the real-world effectiveness of the ReACH (Reducing Alcohol use and related Comorbidities in HIV care) telehealth counseling protocol in a pragmatic Hybrid Type 1 effectiveness-implementation randomized trial. The study will recruit 600 heavy-drinking PLWH from four federally-qualified health centers in geographically distinct regions across the U.S, which provide services to over 14,000 PLWH. Upon completing enrollment, participants will be randomized to receive either single-session brief intervention (BI) by phone with referral to local treatment when appropriate or BI plus referral to ReACH telehealth counseling (TC). Participants will complete follow-ups through 24 months after baseline to assess longer-term changes in drinking and health outcomes. The study will test the hypothesis that TC compared to BI will result in (a) reduced number of drinks consumed per week and frequency of heavy drinking and (b) increased odds of having an undetectable viral load at 12- and 24-month follow-ups. Secondary outcomes include self-reported ART adherence, engagement in condomless sex with non-exclusive partners, frequency of other substance use, phosphatidylethanol levels (a biomarker of recent alcohol use), and Veterans Aging Cohort Study index scores. The study also will examine potential moderators of TC effectiveness. As a secondary aim, implementation measures corresponding to aspects of the Dynamic Sustainability Framework will be assessed including implementation outcomes of acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility guided by Proctor's Implementation Outcomes Framework. Thus, this pragmatic Hybrid Type 1 trial will help establish the real-world effectiveness of the ReACH TC intervention while also providing key implementation-related measures and outcomes that will inform future ReACH TC scale up and sustainability.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
600
Inclusion Criteria
  • In care for HIV at one of 4 participating federally qualified health centers, report at least one heavy drinking day (4+ drinks) or average more than 7 drinks per week in the past 30 days
Exclusion Criteria
  • need for supervised alcohol detoxification, as indicated by having a history of severe withdrawal symptoms such as seizures and delirium tremens.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Brief Intervention plus Telehealth CounselingBrief InterventionA brief alcohol intervention followed by referral to a telehealth counseling protocol including 5 sessions of counseling based on Motivational Interviewing and delivered by videoconferencing. Telehealth counseling extends for up to two years and also includes a text messaging intervention to encourage reductions in drinking.
Brief interventionBrief InterventionA brief alcohol intervention lasting about 10 minutes, delivered after the baseline assessments.
Brief Intervention plus Telehealth CounselingText messagingA brief alcohol intervention followed by referral to a telehealth counseling protocol including 5 sessions of counseling based on Motivational Interviewing and delivered by videoconferencing. Telehealth counseling extends for up to two years and also includes a text messaging intervention to encourage reductions in drinking.
Brief Intervention plus Telehealth CounselingTelehealth CounselingA brief alcohol intervention followed by referral to a telehealth counseling protocol including 5 sessions of counseling based on Motivational Interviewing and delivered by videoconferencing. Telehealth counseling extends for up to two years and also includes a text messaging intervention to encourage reductions in drinking.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Proportion of participants with a detectable HIV viral load24 months

Viral load test result that indicates HIV virus is detectable in the blood

Alcoholics drinks consumed per week24 months

Average number of alcoholic drinks consumed per week over the past 30 days

Number of heavy drinking days24 months

Number of days consuming 4 or more drinks in a day over the past 30 days

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Condomless sex with non-steady partners24 months

Number of days in the past 30 having condomless sex with a non-steady partner

Proportion of the past 30 days adherent to antiretroviral therapy24 months

Antiretroviral therapy adherence as assessed by self-report

Veterans Aging Cohort Study (VACS) index total score24 months

Index of physiologic health calculated using HIV viral load, CD4 cell counts, liver function, creatinine, hemoglobin, platelets, white blood cell count, and height/weight (for body mass index). Higher scores indicate greater physiologic injury and risk for mortality.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Brown University

🇺🇸

Providence, Rhode Island, United States

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