Undetectable = Untransmittable (U=U) is the scientific consensus that people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who achieve viral suppression through antiretroviral treatment (ART) cannot transmit the virus sexually. While global studies confirm this, awareness of U=U remains very limited in sub-Saharan Africa, including South Africa, where only two-thirds of people living with HIV (PLHIV) are virally suppressed despite having the largest treatment program globally. Many PLHIV delay or avoid ART because they feel healthy and perceive little benefit, while also fearing stigma, disclosure, and social costs. U=U offers powerful motivation for ART uptake and adherence by reframing treatment as both a personal health and prevention tool, reducing internalised stigma, strengthening self-image, and supporting HIV prevention altruism. Yet, dissemination in Africa has lagged. To address this, the investigators developed an HIV treatment literacy App called "Undetectable \& You", which delivers accurate U=U information alongside real-life video testimonials of PLHIV and their partners. This research will assess the impact of the "Undetectable \& You" App in a cluster-randomized trial in South Africa. The study will establish whether disseminating U=U information via a video-based app at the time of HIV counselling improves retention in care and viral suppression among PLHIV in South Africa. Aim 1. Refine the "Undetectable \& You" App to help PLHIV navigate U=U within relationships. Aim 2. Establish the real-world impact of "Undetectable \& You" on retention on ART and viral suppression in a cluster-randomized trial.
The study will be a cluster-randomized trial (CRT), where clinics are pair-matched and randomized into immediate intervention (Group A) and deferred intervention (Group B, control) groups. The rationale for this design is to assess the impact of the Undetectable \& You app-based HIV counselling intervention while ensuring that all clinics eventually receive the intervention. The deferred intervention control condition ensures that comparison clinics continue providing standard-of-care HIV counselling during the initial phase of the trial, without exposure to the Undetectable \& You app. This allows for a comparison between the intervention and control groups while controlling for external factors. Data will be collected from an Active Recruitment Cohort (ARC) (n=880) including survey data linked to routine clinical and laboratory records. The primary outcome is documented HIV viral load \<200 copies/mL at 3-9 months after entry into the study. Secondary outcomes include documented HIV viral load \<200 copies/mL at 9-15 months, any viral monitoring at 3-9months and 9-15months, and retention in care (any medication pick-ups) at 5-6 months and at 11-12 months. In addition to the ARC, a Passive Surveillance Platform (PSP) using de-identified South African National Health Laboratory Service (NHLS) data (N \~28,000) will allow for higher-powered assessment of impacts on viral suppression across all patients at study clinics.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
880
The app delivers information on the transmission prevention benefits of HIV treatment through the Undetectable Equals Untransmutable (U=U) message, alongside real-life video testimonials of patients living with HIV (PLHIV) and their partners. It underscores the key behavioral skills required for U=U, namely, ART adherence and viral load monitoring.
HIV viral load <200 copies/mL
Abstracted from clinical and laboratory records.
Time frame: 3-9 months (on average 6 months)
HIV viral load <200 copies/mL
Abstracted from clinical and laboratory records.
Time frame: 9-15 months (on average 12 months)
Any viral monitoring
Abstracted from clinical and laboratory records.
Time frame: 3-9 months (on average 6 months), 9-15 months (on average 12 months)
Retention in care
Retention in care is defined as any medication pick-ups by participants and will be abstracted from the clinical records.
Time frame: 5-6 months, 11-12 months
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