Enhancing Partner Services Among Men Who Have Sex With Men Living With HIV
- Conditions
- Contact Tracing
- Interventions
- Combination Product: Crowdsourced partner services intervention
- Registration Number
- NCT04971967
- Lead Sponsor
- University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- Brief Summary
Individuals will participate in a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) that implements and evaluates the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of crowdsourced partner services (PS) or conventional PS among Chinese men who have sex with men (MSM) living with HIV.
The pilot RCT will include 120 newly identified MSM HIV cases who were born biologically male, aged 18 years old or older, newly identified as HIV positive, had oral or anal sex with a man, had at least one sexual partner in the previous 6 months and live in Guangzhou. Participants will undergo a series of computer-based interviews (baseline and 2 months after enrollment) and will be randomly assigned into two groups in 2:1 ratio (intervention: control) and receive crowdsourced PS and conventional PS, respectively.
- Detailed Description
This is a pilot RCT, and the primary outcomes of this study are: 1) to test the feasibility and acceptability of the crowdsourced intervention, and 2) to pilot the preliminary impact of crowdsourced PS intervention in promoting HIV testing among partners of the newly identified HIV cases. In addition, this pilot RCT aimed to collect preliminary data for the designing of a full RCT, which aimed to measure the efficacy of the crowdsourced PS intervention in promoting PS. Thus, the sample size of this study is not designed and will be not powered enough to test the difference between the two arms. However, with a sample size of 120 (80 for intervention arm and 40 for the control arm, respectively), this pilot study would be able to observe the differences between the two arms and collect preliminary data for adequate sample size calculation of a full RCT. With a sample size of 120 (ratio of 2:1), alpha=0.05, power=0.80, and the partner return rate in the conventional PS arm is 30% (around 31% in 2016 in Guangzhou), the minimal detectable effect size would be 26.7% for this pilot study.
Data analyses: For the primary outcomes of feasibility and acceptability of the intervention: this will be analyzed through descriptive analysis to assess the feedback on the feasibility and acceptability of the crowdsourced PS intervention at baseline and the follow-up survey. For the primary outcome of the proportion of partners returning for HIV testing within 2 months of the index participant's enrolment in the study, log-binomial regression (generalized linear model with binomial distribution and log link) will be used to calculate 95% confidence intervals for the proportion of notifiable partners visiting by arm. Risk differences and risk ratios will also be calculated in these models. As this study is a pilot RCT, adjustment for covariates is not necessary and will not be conducted in the primary analysis. In secondary analyses, pre-specified potential confounding variables will be adjusted that might bias the estimate if not accounted for (e.g. index age, index marital status). If a partner reports more than one index referred him, he will be counted as a returning partner for each identified index.
Subgroup analyses will be performed by partner sex, partner type (e.g. main male partner vs. casual male partner) and sexual orientation. Time to presentation will also be assessed among all notifiable partners using Cox proportional hazards with a robust variance estimator. In the time-to-event analyses, censoring will occur at the end of 2-months. Note that for the primary outcome, the assumption is that any partner without an identifiable record at the community center or in the centralized electronic medical record (EMR) did not present for HIV testing. Therefore, this study assumes no missing outcome data. Sensitivity analyses will be conducted using alternative definitions of presentation for testing, including using the self-reported data from index cases and partners. For count variables expressed as the mean number of partners, the investigators will use either Poisson regression or negative binomial regression if overdispersion is identified.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- Male
- Target Recruitment
- 121
- born biologically male,
- aged 18 years old or older,
- newly identified as HIV positive,
- had oral or anal sex with a man,
- had at least one sexual partner in the previous 6 months
- live in Guangzhou
- Not meet inclusion criteria
- Not given informed consent
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Crowdsourced HIV PS Group Crowdsourced partner services intervention Participants in the intervention group will receive crowdsourced partner services intervention, including postcards from the crowdsourcing contest that promote PS, provider referral and dual referral services, and take-home HIV self testing kits.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Acceptability Degree of the Intervention Using an Acceptability Questionnaire 3 months post enrollment Intervention acceptability, measured by the mean score of an acceptability questionnaire among index patients in the intervention group at 3-month follow-up. The questionnaire asks index patients about their responses to statements regarding the acceptability of the crowdsourced intervention materials, and is rated on a 1-5 scale with mean scores ranging between 1 and 5, where 1 means 'strongly disagree' and 5 means 'strongly agree'. Higher mean scores mean higher acceptability.
Percentage of MSM Index Cases That Respond to the Follow-up Survey at 3 Months After Enrollment 3 months post enrollment Intervention feasibility, measured by the percentage of MSM index cases that respond to the follow-up survey 3 months after enrollment
Percentage of Partners Who Perform HIV-testing Within 3 Months of the Index Patient's Enrollment 3 months post enrollment The preliminary impact of the intervention, measured by the percentage of partners who perform HIV-testing within 3 months of the index patient's enrollment. Partner HIV testing is self-reported by the index, and verified by the partners uploading testing results.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Mean Number of Partners Tested Per Index 3 months post enrollment The mean number of sexual partners tested per index followed for the last 3 months.
Mean Number of Case-finding Per Index 3 months post enrollment The mean number of case-finding (i.e., partners tested positive) per index within 3 months post index enrollment
Percentage of Casual Male Partners Getting HIV Testing 3 months post enrollment The percentage of partners getting HIV testing who are not spouses or regular male partners
Percentage of Partners Who Were Notified Within 3 Months of the Index's Enrollment 3 months post enrollment The percentage of partners who were notified by their indexes within 3 months of the index's enrollment
Percentage of Presenting Partners Reporting Condom Use During the Last Anal Intercourse 3 months post enrollment The percentage of presenting partners who completed the partner survey and reported condom use during the last anal intercourse
Percentage of Partners Who Have Positive HIV Tests Among All Tested Partners 3 months post enrollment The percentage of partners tested as HIV positive among partners who performed HIV-testing in the last 3 months.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Guangzhou Center for Diseases Control and Prevention
🇨🇳Guangzhou, Guangdong, China