Viewing Study NCT04222270



Ignite Creation Date: 2024-05-06 @ 2:08 PM
Last Modification Date: 2024-10-26 @ 1:25 PM
Study NCT ID: NCT04222270
Status: COMPLETED
Last Update Posted: 2022-10-04
First Post: 2020-01-03

Brief Title: Caregiver Peer Support and ART Adherence Among Children
Sponsor: Institute of Human Virology Nigeria
Organization: Institute of Human Virology Nigeria

Study Overview

Official Title: The Impact of Structured Caregiver Peer Support CaPS on ART Adherence and Viral Suppression Among Children Living With HIV in Nigeria
Status: COMPLETED
Status Verified Date: 2024-10
Last Known Status: None
Delayed Posting: No
If Stopped, Why?: Not Stopped
Has Expanded Access: False
If Expanded Access, NCT#: N/A
Has Expanded Access, NCT# Status: N/A
Acronym: CaPS
Brief Summary: Adherence for children living with HIV is a by-proxy phenomenon dependent on caregivers parents relatives or unrelated guardians who may or may not be living with HIV The complexity of paediatric formulations and dosing for ART regimens often poses challenges for caregivers making ART administration and achievement of viral suppression quite a difficult task for young children Peer support for caregivers presents a potentially feasible and impactful approach to improve ART adherence and facilitate achievement of viral suppression among children However there is a scarcity of robust evidence on the impact of caregiver support as a treatment adherence strategy for children

The study is a two-arm cluster randomized controlled trial that includes 78 unsuppressed children living with HIV 0-10 years old and their caregivers at six cluster sites in Nigeria It will

Explore facilitators and barriers to ART adherence among young children to develop a caregiver peer mentor training curriculum and interventional programme
Test the impact of caregiver peer support a locally adapted behavioural intervention to improve adherence and promote achievement of viral suppression among children

The intervention will target caregivers of children measuring outcomes at child level after 12 months of follow up The intervention arm will receive structured caregiver-to-caregiver peer support while the control arm will receive routine standard of care with no such support The researchers will compare ART drug-pickup rates and viral suppression for children living with HIV at specific time points for both arms
Detailed Description: Study Purpose and Intervention The purpose of the study is to evaluate the impact of structured peer support PS to caregivers in achieving treatment adherence among children living with HIV in Nigeria The study adopts a behavioral intervention that engages expert caregivers Champion Caregivers whose CLHIV wards have achieved viral suppression to provide structured peer support to other caregivers towards achieving treatment adherence ART drug-pickup adherence and viral suppression for their CLHIV Using a previously-tested structured PS model Champion Caregivers will receive comprehensive skills-training including counselling techniques and pediatric ART formulationsadministration techniques and will use standardized logbooks to document client interactions

Study Aims and Objectives Recent data from Institute of Human Virology Nigeria IHVN-supported facilities in the study setting show viral suppression averaging 425 among CLHIV 10 years and 61 for those 10-19 years old Clearly younger children need prioritization for viral suppression interventions The structured Mentor Mother PS model was successful in improving viral suppression among HIV-infected women in the same study setting The PS interventions structure lies in a focused curriculum standardized schedules documentation for client interactions and performance evaluations Prior programmatic data indicate that 30-40 of CLHIV have lost at least one biological parent by age 10 years However especially for double orphans or indigentill single parents relativesunrelated guardians who may or may not be HIV-infected step in as primary caregivers Sustained support education and motivation for caregivers is thus important for optimal CLHIV treatment outcomes Prescription refilldrug pickup has been a useful convenient and cost-containing measure of ART adherence in prior studies especially in resource-limited settings Use of integrase inhibitors is at its infancy in Nigeria Dolutegravir scale-up started in earnest in 2018 as such there are no appreciable numbers of children on this drug in early 2019 Approximately 92 of children in the target population are on nevirapine or efavirenz-based regimens The rest are receiving Lopinavir or atazanavir-based regimens Drug resistance testing DRT is not routine and there is currently no in-country capability to test integrase inhibitor resistance There is currently no available data from randomized trials evaluating caregiver PS interventions for CLHIV adherence and viral suppression Given the above context and information investigators propose a two-arm cluster-randomized Caregiver Peer Support CaPS trial at 6 clinics and among 96 CLHIV six months-10 years of age

Study Design Methods and Research Participants

CaPS is a two-arm cluster randomized controlled trial to be conducted at secondary healthcare facilities in two neighboring states Federal Capital Territory FCT and Nasarawa State Secondary facilities are targeted because majority of children and adolescents living with HIV in Nigeria are managed at secondary health facilities

Site Eligibility Criteria

30 CLHIV aged 6 months to 10 years enrolled in care and on ART
1 on-site staff providing adherence counselling for CLHIV
Facility management and staff willing to support study activities In FCT and Nasarawa there are 15 high-volume secondary facilities receiving Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief PEPFAR-supported pediatric quality improvement QI initiatives which do not include caregiver PS Six of the 15 sites will be randomly-selected and randomly-assigned 11 by computer software to receive intervention Champion Caregiver PS or standard-of-care only no caregiver PS

Sample Size Minimum sample size is 13 CLHIV per cluster x 6 clusters 3 clustersarm 66 CLHIV total This sample size has 80 power to detect a 22 increase absolute difference in ART drug pickup rates 73 to 95 assuming an intra-cluster correlation of 003 and coefficient of variation k of 021 Effect size of 32 was achieved with structured PS among women living with HIV in the same study setting

After factoring in 5 for expected mortality rate among Nigerian CLHIV 36 5 for study withdrawal and 5 for formal transfer rates the target sample size per cluster is approximately 13 CLHIV minimum sample size of 13 an extra 15 Total target sample size is thus 96 16 per cluster x 6 clusters

Data Analysis Plan The effect of champion caregiver peer support intervention on drug pick-up rate would be assessed by comparing the drug pickup rate at the intervention and control groups Drug pick-up rates will be categorized into poor fair and good using 80 80-94 and 95 pick-up rates respectively The pattern of the pick-up rate will be described using frequency and percentage distribution Effect of CC support on CLHIV viral suppression will be examined using a multivariate logistic regression model with generalized estimating equation to account for clustering First univariate models will be performed for association between CC supportintensity and viral suppression Biologically-plausible variables and those changing crude effect size by 5 will be sequentially added to the multivariate model Sensitivity analysis with lower VL threshold of 20 copiesml is planned Analysis will be performed with SAS software v 94

Participant Recruitment Investigators will recruit pediatric patients aged between 6 months and 10 years enrolled at pediatric ART clinics within the participating PEPFAR-supported healthcare facilities Research assistants RAs will work with the focal person in the pediatric clinic to identify and recruit eligible patients RAs will approach the parentcaregiver of the eligible participants to obtain consent for participation in the study With regard to assent the Nigerian National Health Research Ethics Committee recommends obtaining assent for children 12 years to under 18 years of age Given the target age group for CaPS age 6 months to 10 years assent would not apply to this study All children enrolled will be required to only have parental consent

Privacy and Confidentiality Risks and Benefits Ethics

1 Privacy measures include having only healthcare workers first approach caregivers and eligible participants for recruitment As such only caregivers and participants who wish to be contacted will be contacted for recruitment To protect participants privacy interviews will take place in a private room
2 Confidentiality measures include the following Trained research assistants will meet with participants in a private space at the health facility to administer study questionnaires Access to study data with privatecontact information is restricted to only key study staff Both hard copy and electronic data will be kept locked or with password protection in secured devices or research file cabinets Protected health information PHI and all study data will be kept confidential following local and international privacy guidelines Participants will be identified with a study ID and forms will be labelled with the participants ID instead of their name Data will be abstracted and stored in an electronic database which will be encrypted De-identified data will be made available to other members of the team such as the biostatistician on a need to know basis Blood samples will be obtained periodically from all participants for viral load measurement throughout the study The samples will be collected according to an established protocol in the health facility and labeled with the participant ID
3 Risks This study is designed to pose only minimal risk to participants Physical risk is associated with the blood sample collection needed for viral load assessment Blood draws carry some risk of causing pain bruising and infection Additional psychological risk may be associated with responding to questions on the psychosocial assessment tools and other qualitative interviews The questionnaires may make a participant feel uncomfortable stressed or a sense of invasion of privacy The main risk to subjects is a potential breach in the protection of the participants private health information Participation in the study activities may lead to increased perception of stigma among participants which presents a social risk

To reduce physical risk all blood draws will be performed by a trained healthcare professional during clinic visits Proper clinical practice gloves sharp disposal etc and appropriate medical attention to address any emergency that may arise from the blood draws will be made available

Psychological risk will be mitigated by ensuring that research staff are trained to be sensitive to the potential for psychological harm Participants will be informed that their participation is voluntary and that participants have the right to refuse to answer or withdraw from the study at any point

Social risk including stigma discrimination and violence associated with participation in the research activities will be minimized by leveraging on safeguards already in place at the healthcare facilities
4 Benefits Probable benefits of the research for individual participants The aim of the intervention is to improve viral suppression and long-term clinical outcome for children living with HIV Enrollment in this program will expose caregivers of CLHIV to knowledge and skill-building activities that may lead to improvement in health outcomes of their childward

Data and Safety Monitoring CaPS will develop a Data Safety Monitoring Plan DSMP to oversee and ensure the safety of participants private health information and the validity and integrity of study data All study personnel will follow the DSMP guidance for managing data to ensure the research data are collected verified and entered in an appropriate manner that reflects completeness integrity and is analyzable

Study Oversight

Has Oversight DMC: None
Is a FDA Regulated Drug?: False
Is a FDA Regulated Device?: False
Is an Unapproved Device?: None
Is a PPSD?: None
Is a US Export?: None
Is an FDA AA801 Violation?: None