The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, clinical outcomes, affordability, and scalability of offering early antiretroviral treatment to all HIV-positive individuals in Swaziland's government-managed health system.
The clinical evidence in support of offering antiretroviral treatment (ART) for all HIV-positive individuals to improve patient health outcomes and reduce HIV incidence is building, and the resource-limited countries where this approach could have the biggest impact want to evaluate if this is a feasible and effective intervention to turn the course of their HIV epidemics. The MaxART Early Access to ART for All (EAAA) implementation study was designed to determine the feasibility, acceptability, clinical outcomes, affordability, and scalability of offering early antiretroviral treatment to all HIV-positive individuals in Swaziland's government-managed health system. This is a 3-year randomized stepped wedge design with open enrollment for all adults 18 years and older across 14 rural health facilities in Swaziland's Hhohho Region. Primary endpoints are retention and viral suppression. Secondary endpoints include ART initiation, adherence, drug resistance, tuberculosis, HIV disease progression, and cost per patient per year. Sites are grouped to transition two at a time from the control (standard of care) to intervention (EAAA) stage at each 4-month step. This balanced design will result in approximately one half of the observations being under an intervention clinic, and the other half under control. Power calculations were conservatively based on the estimated number of individuals expected to enroll in the study comparing the first 12-month measure of retention and 6-month of viral suppression on ART of those entering clinics during their control stage versus those that will be entering a clinic during intervention period. A strategic mix of multidisciplinary research methodologies will be applied to meet the study aim, including implementation science, social science research, economic evaluations, and HIV incidence modeling.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
3,485
All HIV-positive individuals will be initiated on Swaziland's recommended first-line ART regimen, unless contraindicated when recommended alternate regimens will be used per national guidelines.
Swaziland Ministry of Health
Mbabane, Eswatini
Retention
Proportion of individuals retained in care or on ART at 12 months
Time frame: 12 months
Viral suppression
Proportion of individuals whose viral load is below 1,000 copies/ml (virally suppressed) after 6 months on ART
Time frame: 6 months
12-month mortality rate
mortality rate among clients newly enrolled in or returning to facilities during the standard of care phase is equal to 12-month mortality rate among clients newly enrolled in or returning to facilities during early ART phase
Time frame: 12 months
Visit adherence among those initiated on ART
Proportion of missed visits as a number of scheduled appointments among ART-ineligible clients by end of follow-up
Time frame: 36 months
Drug resistance
Proportion of drug resistance among ART-ineligible clients with two virological failures who have received genotype resistance testing
Time frame: 36 months
Tuberculosis
Proportion of HIV-positive individuals diagnosed with new tuberculosis following enrollment (recurrent and newly incident).
Time frame: 36 months
ART uptake among those who are eligible
Proportion of HIV-positive individuals who are eligible for initiation who are successfully initiated to ART within 1 and 3 months of becoming eligible
Time frame: 3 months
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Cost per patient per year
Bottom-up and top-town costing of the patient lifetime cost to test, treat, link, and retain individuals on ART
Time frame: 12 months
HIV infection
Mathematical modeling to estimate the number of new adult HIV infections using empirical data from the primary endpoints
Time frame: 36 months