The investigators are conducting a fully powered cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) of a culturally appropriate, multicomponent intervention combining peer nutritional counseling with urban gardening among people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in the Dominican Republic (DR) to assess efficacy, analyze mediators of effects, and evaluate detailed process data to inform scale-up. The study will examine the impact of the intervention on participants' HIV clinical outcomes (HIV viral load, antiretroviral therapy adherence, and HIV care retention) as well as intermediate outcomes such as food security and HIV-related stigma.
HIV and food insecurity pose severe and interrelated problems in Latin America and the Caribbean, including in the Dominican Republic (DR), where HIV ranks as one of the top 5 causes of death and our prior studies have found that nearly 70% of people with HIV (PWH) have moderate or severe food insecurity. Despite the established, detrimental role of food insecurity on poor HIV treatment outcomes, evidence on sustainable interventions that address the cycle of food insecurity and poor HIV health is scarce. To address this gap, the investigators developed and piloted Proyecto para Mejorar la Seguridad Alimentaria (ProMeSA or Project to Improve Food Security in English), an integrated urban gardens and peer nutritional counseling intervention, and found it feasible, acceptable, and with preliminary efficacy at 6 and 12 months of improving food security and HIV virologic suppression. The purpose of this 5-year study is to conduct a fully powered cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) of ProMeSA to assess intervention efficacy evaluated over a longer period (18 months) as well as mediators and barriers and facilitators to intervention uptake, implementation, and sustainability. The specific aims are: (1) Determine the efficacy of an integrated urban gardens and peer nutritional counseling intervention on the primary outcome of HIV viral suppression \[undetectable HIV viral load (VL)\] and secondary outcomes of antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence and HIV care retention care among people with food insecurity across diverse regions in the DR; (2) Examine the intervention effects on intermediate outcomes posited to mediate the impact of ProMeSA on ART adherence, care retention, and viral suppression; (3) Evaluate process-related factors associated with intervention uptake and implementation (facilitators, barriers, fidelity, and replication costs) to inform future scale-up. The trial will include 20 HIV clinics randomized to intervention or usual care control (n=25 per clinic; \*500 total study participants). VL and other key outcomes will be assessed at baseline, and 6-, 12- and 18-months. Following the investigators' intervention causal framework and pilot findings, they hypothesize that ProMeSA will improve food security and diet quality and reduce stigma and competing needs, which in turn will improve HIV clinical outcomes. The predominant causal paths identified will inform tailoring ProMeSA to enhance impact in future dissemination and implementation. In addition, the investigators will collect extensive quantitative and qualitative data on intervention implementation and participant experiences with the intervention across diverse settings and participants to inform scale-up. The study involves a partnership among researchers from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, University of California, San Francisco, RAND, and the Universidad Autonóma de Santo Domingo as well as the Dominican Ministries of Agriculture and Public Health, the Dominican National HIV/AIDS Council, and the United Nations World Food Program. To the investigators' knowledge, this will be the first full-scale trial to integrate nutritional counseling with food-generating activities among PWH with food insecurity, in support of national and international goals to achieve viral suppression and reduce the disease- and economic burden of HIV. \[\*Update: Because of recruitment challenges at some clinics due to USAID funding cuts and lower detectable viral load, we received NIH approval to reduce sample size to n=433 while retaining similar power\]
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
433
Peer nutritional counseling and urban gardens
Hospital Taiwan 19 de marzo
Azua, Dominican Republic
Hospital Nuestra Señora de la Altagracia
Higüey, Dominican Republic
CPN Las Cinco Casas
Monte Plata, Dominican Republic
Hospital Nuestra Señora de Regla
Peravia, Dominican Republic
Hospital Ricardo Limardo
Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic
SAI Veron
Punta Cana, Dominican Republic
Hospital Leopoldo Pou
Samaná, Dominican Republic
Hospital Juan Pablo Pina
San Cristobal, Dominican Republic
Hospital San Vicente de Paul
San Francisco de Macorís, Dominican Republic
Hospital Dr. Alejandro Cabral
San Juan de la Maguana, Dominican Republic
...and 10 more locations
Change in HIV viral load
Change in viral load
Time frame: Change in viral load between baseline and months 6, 12, and 18
Antiretroviral therapy adherence
Self-reported adherence and objective adherence verified through pharmacy refills
Time frame: 6, 12 and 18 months
HIV care retention
Self-reported missed clinic visits verified through clinic records
Time frame: 6, 12, and 18 months
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