Bernays Sarah, Paparini Sara, Seeley Janet, Namukwaya Kihika Stella, Gibb Diana, Rhodes Tim
Faculty of Public Health Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
MRC/UVRI Uganda Research Unit on AIDS, Social Science Programme, Entebbe, Uganda.
BMJ Open. 2017 Feb 17;7(2):e012934. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012934.
A qualitative study of the BREATHER (PENTA 16) randomised clinical trial, which compared virological control of Short Cycle Therapy (SCT) (5 days on: 2 days off) with continuous efavirenz (EFV)-based antiretroviral therapy (CT) in children and young people (aged 8-24) living with HIV with viral load <50 c/mL to examine adaptation, acceptability and experience of SCT to inform intervention development.
Paediatric HIV clinics in the UK (2), Ireland (1), the USA (1) and Uganda (1).
All BREATHER trial participants who were over the age of 10 and aware of their HIV diagnosis were invited to participate. 49 young people from both arms of the BREATHER trial (31 females and 18 males; 40% of the total trial population in the respective sites; age range 11-24) gave additional consent to participate in the qualitative study.
Young people from both trial arms had initial concerns about the impact of SCT on their health and adherence, but these decreased over the early months in the trial. Young people randomised to SCT reported preference for SCT compared with CT pre-trial. Attitudes to SCT did not vary greatly by gender or country. Once short-term adaptation challenges were overcome, SCT was positively described as reducing impact of side effects, easing the pressure to carry and remember medication and enabling more weekend social activities. Young people on both arms reported frequent medication side effects and occasional missed doses that they had rarely voiced to clinical staff. Participants liked SCT by trial end but were concerned that peers who had most problems adhering could find SCT disruptive and difficult to manage.
To realise the potential of SCT (and mitigate possible risks of longer interruptions), careful dissemination and communication post-trial is needed. SCT should be provided alongside a package of monitoring, support and education over 3 months to allow adaptation.
NCT 01641016.
对BREATHER(PENTA 16)随机临床试验进行定性研究,该试验比较了短周期疗法(SCT)(5天用药:2天停药)与基于依非韦伦(EFV)的持续抗逆转录病毒疗法(CT)对病毒载量<50拷贝/mL的8至24岁HIV感染儿童和青少年的病毒学控制情况,以研究SCT的适应性、可接受性和体验,为干预措施的制定提供信息。
英国(2家)、爱尔兰(1家)、美国(1家)和乌干达(1家)的儿科HIV诊所。
邀请了所有年龄超过10岁且知晓自己HIV诊断情况的BREATHER试验参与者。BREATHER试验两组中的49名年轻人(31名女性和18名男性;占各自研究地点试验总人群的40%;年龄范围11至24岁)额外同意参与定性研究。
试验两组的年轻人最初都担心SCT对其健康和依从性的影响,但在试验的最初几个月里这种担忧有所减轻。随机分配到SCT组的年轻人表示,与试验前的CT相比,他们更喜欢SCT。对SCT的态度在性别或国家之间没有很大差异。一旦克服了短期适应挑战,SCT被积极描述为减少了副作用的影响,减轻了携带和记忆药物的压力,并使更多的周末社交活动成为可能。两组的年轻人都报告了频繁的药物副作用和偶尔的漏服剂量情况,而他们很少向临床工作人员提及这些情况。到试验结束时,参与者喜欢SCT,但担心那些在坚持治疗方面问题最多的同龄人会发现SCT具有干扰性且难以管理。
为了实现SCT的潜力(并减轻更长时间中断治疗可能带来的风险),试验结束后需要进行仔细的推广和沟通。应在3个月内提供一套监测、支持和教育措施,同时实施SCT,以促进适应。
NCT 01641016。