Incorporating oral PrEP into standard prevention services for South African women: a nested interrupted time-series study

ECHO Trial Consortium

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15 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Background: As oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) becomes the standard of prevention globally, its potential effect on HIV incidence in clinical trials of new prevention interventions is unknown, particularly for trials among women. In a trial measuring HIV incidence in African women, oral PrEP was incorporated into the standard of prevention in the trial's last year. We assessed the effect of on-site access to PrEP on HIV incidence in this natural experiment. Methods: We did a nested interrupted time-series study using data from the ECHO trial. At 12 sites in four countries (Eswatini, Kenya, South Africa, and Zambia), women (aged 16–35 years) were randomly assigned to receive one of three contraceptives between Dec 14, 2015, and Sept 12, 2017, and followed up quarterly for up to 18 months to determine the effect of contraceptive method on HIV acquisition. Women were eligible if they wanted long-acting contraception, were medically qualified to receive study contraceptives, and had not used any of the study contraceptives in the past 6 months. The present analyses are limited to nine South African sites where on-site access to oral PrEP was implemented between March 13 and June 12, 2018. Using an interrupted time-series design, we compared HIV incidence before versus after PrEP access, limited to quarterly study visits at which on-site PrEP access was available to at least some participants and, in a sensitivity analysis, to the 180 days before and after access. The outcome was incident HIV infection, detected using two rapid HIV tests done in parallel for each participant at every scheduled follow-up visit. This study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02550067. Findings: 2124 women were followed up after on-site PrEP access began, of whom 543 (26%) reported PrEP use. A total of 12 HIV seroconversions were observed in 556 person-years (incidence 2·16%) after on-site PrEP access, compared with 133 HIV seroconversions in 2860 person-years (4·65%) before PrEP access (adjusted incidence rate ratio [IRR] 0·45, 95% CI 0·25–0·82, p=0·0085). Similar results were also observed when limiting the analysis to 180 days before versus after PrEP access. A total of 46 HIV seroconversions were observed in 919 person-years within 180 days before PrEP access, compared with 11 seroconversions in 481 person-years in the 180 days following PrEP access (incidence 5·00 vs 2·29 per 100 person-years; IRR 0·43, 95% CI 0·22–0·88, p=0·012). Interpretation: On-site access to PrEP as part of standard of prevention in a clinical trial among women in South Africa was associated with halving HIV incidence, when approximately a quarter of women started PrEP. Providing access to on-site PrEP could decrease incidence in HIV prevention trials. These data are also among the first to show in any setting that access to PrEP is associated with decreased HIV acquisition among South African women. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, United States Agency for International Development, President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, South African Medical Research Council, and United Nations Population Fund.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)e495-e501
PublicaciónThe Lancet HIV
Volumen8
N.º8
DOI
EstadoPublished - ago. 2021

Financiación

We thank the women who participated in this study for their motivation and dedication and the communities that supported this work. We are grateful to the members of the trial's data and safety monitoring board, Global Community Advisory Group, and local community advisory boards at each trial site and overseeing ethics review committees for their support of PrEP delivery in the ECHO trial. The ECHO trial was made possible by the combined generous support of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, American people through the United States Agency for International Development and the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency as part of the EDCTP2 programme supported by the EU, South African Medical Research Council, and United Nations Population Fund. IB received funding from the South African Medical Research Council Clinician Researcher MD PhD Development Programme. Contraceptive supplies were donated by the Government of South Africa and United States Agency for International Development. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the views, decisions, or policies of the institutions with which they are affiliated, the ECHO trial funders, or the supporting governments.

FinanciadoresNúmero del financiador
United States Agency for International Development
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Styrelsen för Internationellt Utvecklingssamarbete
United Nations Population Fund
U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief
European Commission
South African Medical Research Council

    ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

    • Epidemiology
    • Immunology
    • Infectious Diseases
    • Virology

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