Abstract

BackgroundAdherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) is essential for allowing persons living with HIV to live longer, healthier lives. However, a large portion of this population has suboptimal adherence and are not virally suppressed. Conventional interventions aimed at improving ART adherence lack portability and scalability, and improvements in adherence are not often sustained. Mobile health (mHealth) ART interventions offer a low-cost and accessible method of improving adherence, but many have limited functionality and do not offer comprehensive support. The combination of an mHealth intervention with a face-to-face adherence intervention and interactive health coaching feature may offer sufficient support in a manner that is sensitive to resource limitations that are often found in HIV treatment settings. This paper details the protocol of a study designed to evaluate the potential of an enhanced mHealth intervention for improving ART adherence.ObjectiveThe primary objective of this study is to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the Fitbit Plus app enhanced with a face-to-face LifeSteps session (Fitbit Plus condition) for improving ART adherence. In addition, we will determine the preliminary efficacy of the intervention by calculating treatment effect sizes.MethodsThis study will be conducted in 2 phases. The intervention will be developed and piloted with a small group of participants during phase 1. Pilot participants will provide feedback that will be used to refine the intervention for phase 2. In phase 2, a preliminary randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing Fitbit Plus with a condition that approximates the standard of care (SOC) will be conducted with 60 persons living with HIV. Interviews will be conducted with RCT participants at baseline, and follow-up interviews will be conducted at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months. ART adherence is the primary outcome and will be monitored throughout the study via electronic pill boxes. Effect sizes will be generated using a fractional logit model estimated by generalized estimating equations.ResultsPhase 1 of this trial is complete; data collection for phase 2 is ongoing. Follow-ups with enrolled participants will conclude in January 2020.ConclusionsThis study will contribute to the literature on ART adherence and may produce an efficacious intervention. Owing to a small sample size, there may be insufficient power to detect statistically significant differences between Fitbit Plus and SOC. However, if Fitbit Plus is found to be acceptable and feasible and yields promising effect size estimates, this pilot study could serve as the foundation for a larger, fully powered trial of Fitbit Plus.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT02676128; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02676128International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/15356

Highlights

  • The HIV Surveillance Report is published annually by the Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S Department of Health and Human Services, Atlanta, Georgia

  • The term HIV infection, stage 3 (AIDS) and its condensed version—stage 3 (AIDS)—refer to persons with diagnosed HIV whose infection was classified as stage 3 (AIDS) during a given year or whose infection has ever been classified as stage 3 (AIDS)

  • Persons living with diagnosed HIV infection ever classified as stage 3 (AIDS), by year and selected characteristics, 2012–2016—United States

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Summary

Suggested citation

Confidential information, referrals, and educational material on HIV infection CDC-INFO 1-800-232-4636 (in English, en Español) 1-888-232-6348 (TTY) http://wwwn.cdc.gov/dcs/ContactUs/Form

United States
Web Addresses for Reports of State and Local HIV Surveillance
REPORT CHANGES
DEFINITIONS AND DATA SPECIFICATIONS
HIGHLIGHTS OF ANALYSES
Diagnoses of HIV infection
Deaths of persons with diagnosed HIV infection
Prevalence of diagnosed HIV infection
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
SUGGESTED READINGS
SURVEILLANCE OF HIV INFECTION
STAGES OF HIV INFECTION
TABULATION AND PRESENTATION OF DATA
Race and Ethnicity
Geographic Designations
Metropolitan Statistical Areas
Transmission Categories
Region of residenceg Northeast Midwest South West
Injection drug use
Region of residencej Northeast Midwest South West
Region of residencej
Region of residenceg
Region of residencef
Region of residenceh
Total No Ratec
Region of residencec
Region of residencea
Puerto Rico South America United States
Central America
Injection drug use Heterosexual contactf
Other Pacific
Totalc No Rated
Children adolescents
Republic of Palau
MSA of residence
Nonmetropolitan areas
Findings
Adults or adolescents
Full Text
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