Africa Health Research Institute, Durban, South Africa; Human and Social Development Research Program, Human Science Research Council, Durban, South Africa; MRC/Developmental Pathways to Health Research Unit, Department of Paediatrics, School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; Department of Psychiatry, Oxford University, Oxford, UK.
Agincourt MRC/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; Department of Psychiatry, Oxford University, Oxford, UK.
Lancet HIV. 2017 Dec;4(12):e566-e576. doi: 10.1016/S2352-3018(17)30133-9. Epub 2017 Aug 23.
Increasing populations of children who are HIV-exposed but uninfected will face the challenge of disclosure of parental HIV infection status. We aimed to test the efficacy of an intervention to increase maternal HIV-disclosure to primary school-aged HIV-uninfected children.
This randomised controlled trial was done at the Africa Health Research Institute in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Women who had tested HIV positive at least 6 months prior, had initiated HIV treatment or been enrolled in pretreatment HIV care, and had an HIV-uninfected child (aged 6-10 years) were randomly allocated to either the Amagugu intervention or enhanced standard of care, using a computerised algorithm based on simple randomisation and equal probabilities of being assigned to each group. Lay counsellors delivered the Amagugu intervention, which included six home-based counselling sessions of 1-2 h and materials and activities to support HIV disclosure and parent-led health promotion. The enhanced standard of care included one clinic-based counselling session. Outcome measures at 3 months, 6 months, and 9 months post baseline were done by follow-up assessors who were masked to participants' group and counsellor allocation. The primary outcome was maternal HIV disclosure (full [using the word HIV], partial [using the word virus], or none) at 9 months post baseline. We did the analysis in the intention-to-treat population. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01922882).
Between July 1, 2013, and Dec 31, 2014, we randomly assigned 464 participants to the Amagugu intervention (n=235) or enhanced standard of care (n=229). 428 (92%) participants completed the 9 month assessment by Sept 3, 2015. Disclosure at any level was more common in the Amagugu intervention group (n=204 [87%]) than in the enhanced standard-of-care group (n=128 [56%]; adjusted odds ratio 9·88, 95% CI 5·55-17·57; p<0·0001). Full disclosure was also more common in the Amagugu intervention group (n=150 [64%]) than in the enhanced standard-of-care group (n=98 [43%]; 4·13, 2·80-6·11; p<0·0001). Treatment-unrelated adverse effects were reported for 17 participants in the Amagugu intervention group versus six in the enhanced standard-of-care group; adverse effects included domestic violence (five [2%] in the Amagugu intervention group vs one [<1%] in the enhanced standard-of-care group), sexual assault (four [2%] vs one [<1%]), participant illness or death (four [2%] vs four [2%]), and family member illness or death (four [2%] vs none). No treatment-related deaths occurred.
The lay-counsellor-driven Amagugu intervention to aid parental disclosure has potential for wide-scale implementation after further effectiveness research and could be adapted to other target populations and other diseases. Further follow-up and effectiveness research is required.
National Institutes of Health.
越来越多的 HIV 暴露但未感染的儿童将面临父母 HIV 感染状况披露的挑战。我们旨在测试一种干预措施增加向小学年龄 HIV 未感染儿童披露母亲 HIV 感染状况的功效。
这项随机对照试验是在南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省非洲健康研究所进行的。在过去 6 个月至少检测到 HIV 阳性、已开始接受 HIV 治疗或已入组接受治疗前 HIV 护理、且有一名 HIV 未感染的儿童(6-10 岁)的妇女被随机分配到 Amagugu 干预组或强化标准护理组,使用基于简单随机化和均等概率分配到每组的计算机算法。非专业顾问提供 Amagugu 干预,包括 6 次家庭为基础的 1-2 小时咨询,以及支持 HIV 披露和父母主导的健康促进的材料和活动。强化标准护理包括一次诊所为基础的咨询。在基线后 3 个月、6 个月和 9 个月进行随访评估,评估人员对参与者的组和顾问分配进行了盲法。主要结局是 9 个月时母亲的 HIV 披露(完全[使用 HIV 一词]、部分[使用病毒一词]或无)。我们在意向治疗人群中进行了分析。这项研究在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册(NCT01922882)。
2013 年 7 月 1 日至 2014 年 12 月 31 日,我们随机将 464 名参与者分配到 Amagugu 干预组(n=235)或强化标准护理组(n=229)。428(92%)名参与者在 2015 年 9 月 3 日前完成了 9 个月的评估。Amagugu 干预组(n=204[87%])的披露程度高于强化标准护理组(n=128[56%]);调整后的优势比为 9.88,95%置信区间为 5.55-17.57;p<0.0001)。完全披露在 Amagugu 干预组(n=150[64%])也比强化标准护理组(n=98[43%])更常见;4.13,2.80-6.11;p<0.0001)。Amagugu 干预组有 17 名参与者报告了与治疗无关的不良事件,而强化标准护理组有 6 名参与者报告了不良事件;不良事件包括家庭暴力(Amagugu 干预组 5[2%],强化标准护理组 1[<1%])、性侵犯(Amagugu 干预组 4[2%],强化标准护理组 1[<1%])、参与者患病或死亡(Amagugu 干预组 4[2%],强化标准护理组 4[2%])和家庭成员患病或死亡(Amagugu 干预组 4[2%],强化标准护理组 0[0%])。没有治疗相关的死亡。
以非专业顾问为基础的 Amagugu 干预措施有助于父母披露,在进一步的有效性研究后具有广泛实施的潜力,并可适用于其他目标人群和其他疾病。需要进一步的随访和有效性研究。
美国国立卫生研究院。