Youth Living with HIV (YLWH) often face unique challenges achieving high and sustained rates of adherence to their antiretroviral therapy (ART). Poor adherence can lead to unsuppressed virus, more advanced HIV disease and poorer health outcomes, eventually exhausting treatment options. To date however, there are few demonstrated interventions for youth failing first line therapy. This study evaluated a novel intervention that used remote coaching through video enabled counseling sessions, an Electronic Dose Monitoring (EDM) pill bottle that notified an adherence coach when youth failed to open/close the device around dose time, and problem solving outreach by the coach in response to not dosing from the EDM. This intensive 'boot camp' strategy was implemented for 12 weeks followed by observation through 48 weeks.
This was a Phase II, two-arm, randomized, open-label study. Eligible participants had failed ART therapy, defined as having a detectable plasma Human Immunodeficiency Virus - Type 1 Ribonucleic Acid (HIV-1 RNA) ≥200 copies/ml within 45 days of enrollment despite having been prescribed ART for at least 24 weeks. They could continue the same ART regimen or start a new once daily regimen. Participants were stratified by age (\<18 vs. ≥18 years of age) and randomized in equal proportions to receive the study intervention (TERA) or standard of care (SOC), with no enrollment limits in each stratum. Target accrual was 120 participants to be enrolled over one year. TERA was a time-limited (12 weeks) intervention approach that (a) used wireless electronic dose monitoring (EDM) to identify dose-times passing with no bottle opening, (b) sent a text asking about the delay, (c) evaluated response to the text and (d) initiated follow-up by an adherence coach depending on the response and if the bottle remained unopened for a designated period post dosing. Phone based outreach used problem solving discussion with an adherence coach, who could use an agreed-upon contact tree to reach the youth through other individuals. This "boot camp" strategy was used to unsettle or disrupt established non-adherence behaviors and factors promoting ongoing non-adherence. Participants were followed for 48 weeks, with clinic visits at entry and weeks 4, 12, 24, 36 and 48. Audio computer assisted self-interviews (ACASI) were conducted every 12 weeks to collect information on adherence, motivation and skills, social support, mental and physical health functioning. Viral loads, medication and medical histories were also collected at each study visit. The primary objective of the study was to compare HIV-virologic suppression (VLS) rates at 12 weeks. Secondary objectives included comparing VLS rates and EDM rates of ART adherence at 24, 36, and 48 weeks as well as patterns of adherence over time. Major changes after the start of enrollment: 1. To address lower than anticipated enrollment, the requirement that participants be failing first line ART was dropped in Protocol Version 2.0 (May 9, 2018). 2. Accrual was closed before reaching the target enrollment of 120 participants on the recommendation of the Study Monitoring Committee (September 30, 2019). 3. Coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) Updates: On March 20, 2020, the TERA study suspended all study activities due to COVID-19. On May 5, 2020, sites were allowed to resume TERA study activities whenever their institution allowed human subjects research to resume. Participants were encouraged to return for their final Week 48 clinic visits. At the time of the study pause, data collection for the Primary Outcome Measures was complete, so the analyses proposed in the original Statistical Analysis Plan were not affected. Follow-up for the Secondary Outcome Measures involving HIV-1 RNA measurements and adherence was incomplete, with 33% of participants still on study. Because of the possibility that participant behavior and adherence to ART would differ pre- and post-pandemic, and it would not be possible to collect HIV-1 RNA measurements within the required visit windows (sites were actively trying to keep patients from coming into care unless urgently needed), the Study Team decided to base analyses on data collected prior to the COVID-19 study pause. In addition, because the secondary virologic outcome measures were a combination of HIV-1 RNA levels and data completeness (classifying participants with no HIV-1 RNA measurement within the allowed visit window as "virologic failures"), the analysis population for these outcome measures only included participants with sufficient time on study to reach each study visit. These changes were implemented on June 2, 2020 in a Letter of Amendment (LOA) to TERA Protocol Version 3.1. The LOA detailed three modifications due to COVID-19 study visit suspension, but did not affect the existing protocol: 1. Extension of Week 48 visit window through the end of data collection (October 12, 2020) for participants on-study as of March 20, 2020, due to COVID-19 study suspension. 2. Changed all secondary outcome measures to apply only to data collected prior to COVID-19 study suspension on March 20, 2020. Only participants who had been on study long enough to reach the Week 24, 36 or 48 study visits were included in the analyses. 3. Virtual/remote site monitoring was implemented for all remaining site monitoring visits. On September 24, 2020, the Study Team released a memo to the sites extending the date for the Week 48 study visit to October 12, 2020. Results for secondary outcome measures 3 to 8 are based on the pre COVID-19 study pause database as of March 20, 2020. Results for secondary outcome measures 9 and 10 are based on the complete study database as of October 12, 2020.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
89
A sequence of adherence support strategies implemented at care visits and as needed on the basis of EDM data. Components include: (1) remote education/preparation with an adherence coach conducted with VSee software (video conferencing) at site at baseline, week 4 and week 12; (2) one-way text alert at dose time when bottle has not yet been opened for that dosing window (users can disable this on request); (3) missed dose two-way outreach text asking "What's the plan?" which gets sent to both the participant's phone and a study phone; and (4) implementation of the coach-outreach (phone, text, remote counseling) triggered by missed doses or as a check-in to inquire about the well-being of the youth (once per week when no other contact with coach occurred the week prior).
Cell-phone reminders, patient-education, adherence planning (medication management), and checking-in on adherence at clinical care visits, as well as Viral load (VL) monitoring with patient feedback on VL, are used at sites. Less common, but available as a general service at some sites, on several websites, and at many pharmacies, youth may also receive text messages at dose times, for appointment reminders, and for refill reminders.
University of Colorado Denver Children's Hospital Colorado
Aurora, Colorado, United States
Broward Health Childrens Diagnostic and Treatment Center (CDTC)
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States
University of Florida Center for HIV/AIDS, Research, Education & Service
Jacksonville, Florida, United States
Emory University School of Medicine
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Wayne State University School of Medicine
Detroit, Michigan, United States
Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center
The Bronx, New York, United States
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Percentage of Participants With Plasma Human Immunodeficiency Virus - Type I Ribonucleic Acid (HIV-1 RNA) Levels Less Than (<) 50 Copies/mL at Week 12
Participants with HIV-1 RNA \< 50 copies/mL within the week 12 window (+/- 14 days) are classified as successes. Participants with HIV-1 RNA \>= 50 copies/mL or with no HIV-1 RNA measurement within the week 12 window are classified as failures.
Time frame: 12 weeks post enrollment
Percentage of Participants With HIV-1 RNA < 200 Copies/mL at Week 12
Participants with HIV-1 RNA \< 200 copies/mL within the week 12 window (+/- 14 days) are classified as successes. Participants with HIV-1 RNA \>= 200 copies/mL or with no HIV-1 RNA measurement within the week 12 window are classified as failures.
Time frame: 12 weeks post enrollment
Percentage of Participants With HIV-1 RNA < 50 Copies/mL at Weeks 24, 36 and 48
Participants with HIV-1 RNA \< 50 copies/mL within each week window (+/- 28 days) are classified as successes. Participants with HIV-1 RNA \>= 50 copies/mL or who had the opportunity to reach the study visit week and with no HIV-1 RNA measurement within the week window are classified as failures.
Time frame: 24, 36 and 48 weeks post enrollment
Percentage of Participants With HIV-1 RNA < 200 Copies/mL at Weeks 24, 36 and 48
Participants with HIV-1 RNA \< 200 copies/mL within each week window (+/- 28 days) are classified as successes. Participants with HIV-1 RNA \>= 200 copies/mL or who had the opportunity to reach the study visit week and with no HIV-1 RNA measurement within the week window are classified as failures.
Time frame: 24, 36 and 48 weeks post enrollment
Percentage of Participants With HIV-1 RNA < 200 Copies/mL at 12 Weeks and Maintained Through 48 Weeks
Participants are classified as successes if both the week 12 (+/- 14 days) and week 48 (+/- 28 days) HIV-1 RNA measurements are \< 200 copies/mL and at least one of the week 24 (+/- 28 days) or week 36 (+/- 28 days) HIV-1 RNA measurements is \< 200 copies/mL. Otherwise, the participant is classified as a failure.
Time frame: 48 weeks post enrollment
Percentage of Days With Dose Taken From Weeks 0-12, >12-24, >24-36 and >36-48
For each participant and each 12-week period, the percentage is calculated as the number of days with dose taken divided by the number of days with data reported in the Electronic Monitoring Device (EDM).
Time frame: Enrollment through 48 weeks
Percentage of Days With Dose Taken Within Defined Acceptable Window (+/- 4 Hours) From Weeks 0-12, >12-24, >24-36 and >36-48
For each participant and each 12-week period, the percentage is calculated as the number of days with dose taken within acceptable window divided by the number of days with data reported in the EDM.
Time frame: Enrollment through 48 weeks
Incidence Rate of 7-day Gaps Between Dosing for Weeks 0-12, >12-24, >24-36 and >36-48
For each participant, the incidence rate during each 12 week interval is calculated as the ratio of the number of 7-day gaps between doses relative to the number of weeks with data reported, times 12. Consecutive gaps of more than 7 days increase the gap count by one, e.g., missing 20 days counts as 2 gaps.
Time frame: Enrollment through 48 weeks
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