Evaluation of Multiple Interventions to Improve HIV Treatment Outcomes Among People Who Inject Drugs in India

Last updated: March 17, 2025
Sponsor: Johns Hopkins University
Overall Status: Active - Not Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Hiv Infections

Treatment

Routine adherence support [usual care]

Government-based HIV care [usual care]

Enhanced adherence support [experimental]

Clinical Study ID

NCT05165810
IRB00232746
R01DA049301
  • Ages > 18
  • All Genders

Study Summary

The goal of this study is to improve HIV care outcomes for people who inject drugs (PWID) in India. The study will implement a two-phase trial to evaluate whether HIV treatment outcomes (HIV viral suppression) in HIV infected PWID can be improved with three different interventions: i) by offering a faster treatment start time (same-day antiretroviral therapy [ART] initiation vs. standard), ii) by provided community-based HIV care in PWID-focused centers (vs. centralized government-based HIV care) and, iii) providing an enhanced adherence support to participants who experience treatment failure at six months (vs. routine adherence support). The investigators hypothesize that faster access to ART and HIV treatment in PWID-focused community sites will lead to higher levels of initiation and retention to ART compared with standard care; and use of enhanced navigation and psychosocial support to patients who experience treatment failure at six months will lead to improved viral suppression compared with routine adherence support.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

PHASE 1 Inclusion Criteria:

  • 18 years of age or older

  • Reports injection drug use in prior 24 months

  • Documented HIV positive

  • Antiretroviral therapy naïve

  • HIV RNA 1,000 c/mL or higher

  • If previously linked to HIV care, able and willing to provide govt. ART book fordocumentation of care received.

Exclusion

PHASE 1 Exclusion Criteria:

  • Pregnant (if female)

  • Does not speak English, Hindi, or local language

  • Plans to migrate in next 12 months

  • Not competent to participate in the study or provide written informed consent.

PHASE 2 Inclusion Criteria:

• Participants who experience treatment failure at 6 months (HIV RNA>1000c/mL)

PHASE 2 Exclusion Criteria:

• Participants who do not experience treatment failure at 6 months

Study Design

Total Participants: 800
Treatment Group(s): 6
Primary Treatment: Routine adherence support [usual care]
Phase:
Study Start date:
March 09, 2023
Estimated Completion Date:
April 30, 2026

Study Description

People who inject drugs (PWID) are at high risk for HIV infection and experience worse antiretroviral therapy (ART) outcomes than other key populations, particularly in low and middle income countries (LMIC). India has the largest number of opioid users in the world, and new injection drug epidemics have emerged in the North and Central regions of the country.

In phase 1, the investigators will evaluate two structural interventions to improve treatment outcomes among HIV-positive PWID in India. First, same-day ART (initiating ART on the day of HIV diagnosis/confirmation rather than waiting until standard evaluations are completed in an HIV clinic), was found to increase viral suppression rates in African studies with generalized HIV epidemics, but has not been evaluated in PWID. The second intervention is community-based HIV care. At present, all publicly-financed HIV treatment is provided at designated government ART centers. In prior work, the investigators found that PWID-centric integrated care centers (ICCs) were effective at engaging the population and increasing HIV testing uptake and were rated favorably by clients in anonymous surveys. ICCs linked HIV-positive PWID to government clinics, but were not equipped to provide primary HIV care. However, ICCs can be scaled-up to provide HIV treatment on-site and the investigators hypothesize this will improve initiation and retention to ART among PWID. The investigators will use a randomized factorial design to determine the individual and joint effects of same-day ART initiation and community-based HIV care. The primary outcome of the phase-1 trial is viral suppression at 6 months, with longer term follow-up to 18 months.

In phase 2, the investigators will evaluate a psychosocial/navigation intervention (enhanced adherence support) among participants who experience treatment failure during the first trial phase, defined as non-suppressed HIV RNA at the 6-month visit. These participants will be randomly assigned (in a second randomization) to enhanced adherence support or routine adherence support. The primary outcome of phase-2 will be viral suppression 6 months following the second randomization (12 months from enrollment in phase-1).

Connect with a study center

  • POINTER study -YRGCARE

    New Delhi,
    India

    Site Not Available

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