Offering PrEP care online and reducing the frequency of monitoring may increase access to HIV PrEP. The objective of this study is to assess the non-inferiority of an internet-based HIV PrEP-service and reduced frequency of monitoring visits in comparison to standard-of-care at the Public Health Service in 4 regions in the Netherlands: Amsterdam, Rotterdam-Rijnmond, Haagland and Gelderland-Zuid.
Rationale: The population impact of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) largely depends on the uptake and consistent use of PrEP by people at high risk for HIV infection. In the Dutch National PrEP Programme (NPP), PrEP care consists of quarterly monitoring visits, which includes testing for HIV, sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and renal function, and provision of combination tablets of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and emtricitabine. PrEP care is available for men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender persons (TGP) at low cost through the centers for sexual health (CSH) of public health services (GGD's). Offering PrEP care online and reducing the frequency of monitoring may increase access to PrEP. Objective: To assess the non-inferiority of an internet-based HIV PrEP-service and reduced frequency of monitoring visits in comparison to standard-of-care at the Public Health Service. Study design: Randomised, non-blinded, controlled, parallel group, non-inferiority trial. Study population: MSM and TGP of 18 years of age or older who are eligible for HIV PrEP according to NPP guidelines based on self-reported sexual behavior indicating HIV risk. Intervention: The study takes place in four GGD regions in the Netherlands: Amsterdam, Haaglanden, Rotterdam-Rijnmond and Gelderland-Zuid. Participants will be assigned to one of four arms: (1) routine care with quarterly monitoring at CSH; (2) routine care with biannual monitoring at CSH; (3) internet-based PrEP-care (i.e. video consultations and online-mediated testing for HIV, STIs and renal function) with quarterly monitoring; (4) internet-based PrEP-care with biannual monitoring. Each participant will be followed for 18 months. Main study parameters/endpoints: The primary outcome is adherence to PrEP, determined by self-reported daily data on pill-intake and sexual behavior. Non-adherence is defined as a PrEP-less and condom-less anal sex act with a casual partner. Secondary outcomes include the incidence of HIV and Hepatitis C virus infections and bacterial STIs; creatinine clearance, glycosuria and proteinuria; retention in PrEP-care; psychosocial health; and acceptance and usability of the internet-based PrEP service.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
469
Variations on routine PrEP care at the Public Health Services in the Netherlands: online PrEP care and reduced frequency of monitoring
Public Health Service of Amsterdam
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Public Health Service Gelderland-Zuid
Nijmegen, Netherlands
Public Health Service Rotterdam-Rijnmond
Rotterdam, Netherlands
Public Health Service Haaglanden
The Hague, Netherlands
Adherence to PrEP regimen
Non-adherence is defined as a PrEP-less and condom-less anal sex act with a casual partner, termed an unprotected act (UA). Self-reported daily data on sexual behaviour, pill intake and condom use are recorded in an electronic diary. Using these data, we will count the number of UAs (n), and the person-months at risk (pmar) per person; this will yield the incidence rate (IR) per person month (= n / pmar). This will be done for each study arm separately.
Time frame: 18 months for each individual study participant
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