Amico K Rivet, Stirratt Michael J
University of Connecticut, Center for Health Intervention and Prevention, Storrs Applied Health Research, Brighton, Michigan.
Division of AIDS Research, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
Clin Infect Dis. 2014 Jul;59 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S55-60. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciu266.
Despite considerable discussion and debate about adherence to preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), scant data are available that characterize patterns of adherence to open-label PrEP. The current evidence base is instead dominated by research on adherence to placebo-controlled investigational drug by way of drug detection in active-arm participants of large randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Important differences between the context of blinded RCTs and open-label use suggest caution when generalizing from study product adherence to real-world PrEP use. Evidence specific to open-label PrEP adherence is presently sparse but will expand rapidly over the next few years as roll-out, demonstration projects, and more rigorous research collect and present findings. The current evidence bases established cannot yet predict uptake, adherence, or persistence with open-label effective PrEP. Emerging evidence suggests that some cohorts could execute better adherence in open-label use vs placebo-controlled research. Uptake of PrEP is presently slow in the United States; whether this changes as grassroots and community efforts increase awareness of PrEP as an effective HIV prevention option remains to be determined. As recommended by multiple guidelines for PrEP use, all current demonstration projects offer PrEP education and/or counseling. PrEP support approaches generally fall into community-based, technology, monitoring, and integrated sexual health promotion approaches. Developing and implementing research that moves beyond simple correlates of either study product use or open-label PrEP adherence toward more comprehensive models of sociobehavioral and socioecological adherence determinants would greatly accelerate progress. Intervention research is needed to identify effective models of support for open-label PrEP adherence.
尽管关于坚持使用针对人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的暴露前预防(PrEP)有大量的讨论和辩论,但关于坚持使用开放标签PrEP模式的可用数据却很少。目前的证据基础主要是大型随机对照试验(RCT)活性组参与者通过药物检测来研究坚持使用安慰剂对照试验药物的情况。盲法RCT背景与开放标签使用之间的重要差异表明,从研究产品的依从性推广到实际使用PrEP时需谨慎。目前关于开放标签PrEP依从性的具体证据很少,但随着推广、示范项目以及更严格的研究收集并呈现结果,未来几年这方面的证据将迅速增加。目前已建立的证据基础尚无法预测开放标签有效PrEP的接受度、依从性或持续性。新出现的证据表明,与安慰剂对照研究相比,一些队列在开放标签使用中可能有更好的依从性。目前在美国,PrEP的接受度较低;随着基层和社区努力提高对PrEP作为一种有效的HIV预防选择的认识,这种情况是否会改变仍有待确定。正如多项PrEP使用指南所建议的,所有当前的示范项目都提供PrEP教育和/或咨询。PrEP支持方法一般分为基于社区的、技术的、监测的以及综合性性健康促进方法。开展并实施超越单纯研究产品使用或开放标签PrEP依从性相关因素,转向更全面的社会行为和社会生态依从性决定因素模型的研究,将极大地加速进展。需要进行干预研究,以确定支持开放标签PrEP依从性的有效模式。