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Clinical Trials/NCT00432926
NCT00432926
Completed
Phase 2

Behavior Change and Maintenance Intervention for HIV+ MSM Methamphetamine Users

University of California, San Diego1 site in 1 country429 target enrollmentFebruary 2007

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
HIV Infections
Sponsor
University of California, San Diego
Enrollment
429
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Reduction of defined sexual risk behaviors
Status
Completed
Last Updated
13 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

This study tests the effectiveness of a behavioral intervention to reduce sexual risk behavior in HIV-positive, methamphetamine-using men who have sex with men (MSM). It builds on the findings of a previous study (R01 DA012116, "Promoting safer sex in HIV+ homosexual and bisexual men who use methamphetamine"). That study achieved significant short-term results that eroded over time. Accordingly, this study hypothesizes that the addition of a maintenance component to the already proven counseling and educational components of the treatment model will result in longer-lasting positive effects.

Detailed Description

Methamphetamine use by MSM has been consistently associated with increased HIV transmission. In the previous funding period we demonstrated reductions in transmission risk behavior associated with participation in our behavioral intervention; however, these improvements eroded over time, underscoring the need to develop and test interventions designed to enhance longer-term behavior change. The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of an intervention designed to maintain reductions in high-risk sexual practices achieved by methamphetamine-using HIV+ MSM. Three major questions addressed are: 1) Can methamphetamine-using HIV+ MSM modify their high-risk sexual practices over an extended (16-month) period? 2) Do "group maintenance sessions" result in less erosion of behavioral improvements? 3) Are the underlying mechanisms the same for acquisition and maintenance of behavior change? We will assign 450 sexually active HIV+ MSM who regularly use methamphetamine and who have had unprotected sex with an HIV-negative or unknown-status partner to one of three conditions: 1) an eight-session intervention, combining client-centered motivational interviewing and structured behavioral counseling to address five intervention domains (context of unsafe sex/drug use; condom use; safer sex negotiation; disclosure; and enhancement of social supports); 2) the same eight counseling sessions (i.e., identical to condition 1 above), plus eight group-format safer sex maintenance sessions, which utilize clinical strategies from relapse prevention to identify high-risk situations and develop effective coping strategies; or 3) an attention-control condition that is time-equivalent to condition 2 above, and addresses diet, exercise, and HIV. Thus we will determine whether longer-term maintenance of safer sex behaviors is possible among HIV+ methamphetamine-using MSM, a population that remains at very high risk of HIV transmission, and for which substitution therapies to promote cessation and risk reduction are not yet available.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
February 2007
End Date
April 2012
Last Updated
13 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
Male

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Thomas L. Patterson

Principal Investigator

University of California, San Diego

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Used methamphetamine at least twice in last two months
  • At least some recent sexual partners were male
  • At least some recent sexual activity has been high-risk for transmission of HIV

Exclusion Criteria

  • Current major psychiatric diagnosis
  • Only HIV+ sex partners in past two months
  • Consistently protected sex with HIV- or serostatus-unknown partners in last two months
  • Sexually inactive in last two months
  • Found out about HIV+ status less than two months ago

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Reduction of defined sexual risk behaviors

Time Frame: 18 months

Study Sites (1)

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