Kamis Kevin F, Marx Grace E, Scott Kenneth A, Gardner Edward M, Wendel Karen A, Scott Mia L, Montgomery Angela E, Rowan Sarah E
Denver Public Health, Denver Health and Hospital Authority, Colorado.
University of Colorado, Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Aurora.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2019 Jun 27;6(7):ofz310. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofz310. eCollection 2019 Jul.
Strategies to increase pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) uptake are needed. We hypothesized that same-day PrEP initiation in a sexually transmitted diseases (STD) clinic would be acceptable, feasible, and safe, and that individuals would engage in ongoing PrEP care.
Individuals aged ≥ 18 years were evaluated for PrEP. Exclusion criteria were HIV, history of renal dysfunction or chronic hepatitis B infection, pregnancy, indications for HIV post-exposure prophylaxis, or positive screen for acute HIV symptoms. One hundred individuals received a free 30-day PrEP starter pack and met with a patient navigator to establish ongoing care. Bivariate analysis and multivariable logistic regression were used to compare individuals who did and did not attend at least 1 PrEP follow-up appointment within 180 days of enrollment. Client satisfaction surveys were given 3 months after enrollment.
The majority (78%) of participants completed at least 1 PrEP follow-up appointment, and 57% attended at least 2 follow-up appointments. After adjusting for race and ethnicity, age, health insurance status, and annual income, only income was associated with follow-up appointment attendance. Each additional $10,000 increase in income was associated with a 1.7-fold increase in the odds of attending a PrEP follow-up appointment (95% confidence interval, 1.07-2.66, = .02). The majority (54%) of individuals completed the satisfaction survey and all respondents liked the option of same-day PrEP initiation.
Our study suggests STD clinic-based, same-day PrEP initiation is acceptable, feasible, safe, and links a high proportion of individuals into ongoing PrEP care. Additional resources may be needed to support low-income individuals' retention in care.
需要采取策略来提高暴露前预防(PrEP)的使用率。我们假设在性传播疾病(STD)诊所当天启动PrEP是可接受的、可行的且安全的,并且个体将持续接受PrEP治疗。
对年龄≥18岁的个体进行PrEP评估。排除标准包括HIV感染、肾功能不全病史或慢性乙型肝炎感染、妊娠、HIV暴露后预防指征或急性HIV症状筛查呈阳性。100名个体收到了一份免费的30天PrEP起始套装,并与一名患者导航员会面以建立持续治疗。采用双变量分析和多变量逻辑回归来比较在入组后180天内参加和未参加至少1次PrEP随访预约的个体。在入组3个月后进行客户满意度调查。
大多数(78%)参与者完成了至少1次PrEP随访预约,57%的人参加了至少2次随访预约。在调整种族和民族、年龄、健康保险状况和年收入后,只有收入与随访预约的出席情况相关。收入每增加10,000美元,参加PrEP随访预约的几率就增加1.7倍(95%置信区间,1.07 - 2.66,P = .02)。大多数(54%)个体完成了满意度调查,所有受访者都喜欢当天启动PrEP的选择。
我们的研究表明,基于STD诊所的当天PrEP启动是可接受的、可行的、安全的,并且能使很大比例的个体进入持续的PrEP治疗。可能需要额外的资源来支持低收入个体持续接受治疗。