Department of Sociology, Center on Health, Risk and Society, American University, Washington, DC.
Department of Psychiatry, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2019 Oct 1;82(2):141-148. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000002123.
To determine the impact of a community empowerment model of combination HIV prevention (Project Shikamana) among female sex workers (FSW) in Iringa, Tanzania.
We conducted a 2-community randomized trial. Intervention elements included the following: (1) Community-led drop-in center and mobilization activities; (2) venue-based peer education, condom distribution, and HIV testing; (3) peer service navigation; (4) provider sensitivity trainings; and (5) SMS reminders. We used time-location sampling to enroll 496 FSW and conducted a survey and blood draws to screen for HIV and assess viral load at 0 and 18 months. We conducted an intent-to-treat analysis using logistic and Poisson regression and inverse probability weighting for primary outcomes.
The analysis included 171 HIV-positive and 216 HIV-negative FSW who completed baseline and 18-month study visits. Participants in the intervention were significantly less likely to become infected with HIV at 18-month follow-up (RR 0.38; P = 0.047), with an HIV incidence of 5.0% in the intervention vs. 10.4% control. Decreases in inconsistent condom use over time were significantly greater in the intervention (72.0%-43.6%) vs. control (68.8%-54.0%; RR 0.81, P = 0.042). At follow-up, we observed significant differences in behavioral HIV care continuum outcomes, and positive, but nonsignificant, increases in viral suppression (40.0%-50.6%) in the intervention vs. control (35.9%-47.4%). There was a strong association of between higher intervention exposure and HIV outcomes including viral suppression.
Project Shikamana is the first trial of community empowerment-based combination prevention among FSW in Africa to show a significant reduction in HIV incidence warranting its broader implementation and evaluation.
在坦桑尼亚伊林加,确定社区赋权模式的组合 HIV 预防(Shikamana 项目)对女性性工作者(FSW)的影响。
我们进行了一项 2 个社区随机试验。干预元素包括以下内容:(1)社区主导的免下车中心和动员活动;(2)基于场所的同伴教育、 condom 分发和 HIV 检测;(3)同伴服务导航;(4)提供者敏感性培训;和(5)SMS 提醒。我们使用时间地点抽样法招募了 496 名 FSW,并进行了调查和采血,以筛查 HIV 并在 0 和 18 个月时评估病毒载量。我们使用逻辑和泊松回归和逆概率加权进行了意向治疗分析,以评估主要结局。
分析包括 171 名 HIV 阳性和 216 名 HIV 阴性 FSW,他们完成了基线和 18 个月的研究访问。在 18 个月的随访中,干预组感染 HIV 的风险显著降低(RR 0.38;P = 0.047),干预组的 HIV 发病率为 5.0%,而对照组为 10.4%。随着时间的推移,干预组中不一致 condom 使用的减少显著更大(72.0%-43.6%),而对照组为(68.8%-54.0%;RR 0.81,P = 0.042)。在随访时,我们观察到行为 HIV 护理连续体结局的显著差异,以及干预组(40.0%-50.6%)比对照组(35.9%-47.4%)中病毒抑制的显著增加,但呈阳性。在干预和 HIV 结局之间存在强烈的关联,包括病毒抑制。
Shikamana 项目是非洲第一个针对 FSW 的基于社区赋权的组合预防试验,显示出 HIV 发病率的显著降低,值得更广泛的实施和评估。