Drug use (DU) is a major risk factor for HIV infection in many regions of the world. However, as highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has been rolled out in South and South East Asia, less than 2% of individuals initiated on HAART were drug users (DUs) or former DUs, despite the fact that approximately 20% of HIV infections in the region are ascribed to DU. India is home to about 2.4 million HIV-infected individuals. Though, injection drug users contribute to only about 3% of all HIV infections in India; it is estimated that there are between 168,000 and 1.1 million DUs in India with HIV prevalence about 30%. Novel approaches are needed to engage disenfranchised populations in HIV care in lower and middle income countries, where the burden of HIV disease is growing. Incentive-based strategies (or contingency management) have been shown to be effective in reducing illicit drug use, smoking cessation, and weight loss. Short-term pilot studies have also shown that incentive-based strategies can improve electronically-monitored rates of adherence to HAART in the US, and a recent study in Africa showed that a small incentive approximately doubled the rate that individuals returned to learn the results of their HIV test. However, to date there is no experience with the use of incentive-based interventions to improve engagement into care and risk-reduction among out-of-care HIV-infected DUs in developing world settings. The investigators propose to conduct pilot randomized trial comparing a voucher incentive strategy to a control condition to improve engagement in HIV care and HIV treatment outcomes among out-of-care, treatment-eligible, HIV-infected DUs in Chennai, India. Subjects in the incentive arm will be eligible to earn incentive vouchers for 1) initiating HAART at a government-sanctioned HIV treatment clinic, 2) adherence to scheduled follow-up visits at the HIV clinic, and 3) achieving suppression of HIV RNA. Subjects will be enrolled from a mature research venue in Chennai, YR Gaitonde Centre for Substance Abuse-related Research (YRGCSAR), which focuses the epidemiology and natural history of HIV in DUs. Preliminary data from this pilot study will be used to inform the design of a phase-III study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
120
Participants are provided a non-monetary incentive for achieving particular tasks between study visits. Tasks include initiation of HAART, timely refill of medications from the government ART centers, suppression of HIV RNA
Control participants receive counseling and referral, but no incentives for engagement in HIV care. At study visits they are eligible to receive "bonuses" through prizebowl drawings to offset the inability to earn incentives.
YR Gaitonde Centre for Substance Abuse-Related Research (YRGCSAR)
Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
Time to initiation of HAART
Time frame: 12 months
Attendance at HIV treatment visits
Time frame: 12-months
HAART possession ratio (a surrogate of medication adherence based on pharmacy fill data)
Time frame: 12-months
Proportion with HIV RNA < 400 copies/mL at 6- and 12-months
Time frame: 12-month
Changes in absolute CD4 count from baseline at 6- and 12-months
Time frame: 12-months
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