The Infectious Diseases Institute Limited, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2024 May;27(5):e26255. doi: 10.1002/jia2.26255.
INTRODUCTION: Adherence counselling with point-of-care (POC) drug-level feedback using a novel tenofovir assay may support pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) adherence; however, perceptions of urine testing and its impact on adherence are not well studied. We qualitatively examined how POC tenofovir testing was experienced by transgender women (TGW) in Uganda. METHODS: Within a cluster randomized trial of peer-delivered HIV self-testing, self-sampling for sexually transmitted infections and PrEP among HIV-negative TGW showing overall low PrEP prevention-effective adherence (NCT04328025), we conducted a nested qualitative sub-study of the urine POC assay among a random sample of 30 TGW (August 2021-February 2022). TGW interviews explored: (1) experiences with POC urine tenofovir testing and (2) perceptions of PrEP adherence counselling with drug-level feedback. We used an inductive content analytic approach for analysis. RESULTS: Median age was 21 years (interquartile range 20-24), and 70% engaged in sex work. Four content categories describe how TGW experienced POC urine tenofovir testing: (1) Urine tenofovir testing was initially met with scepticism: Testing urine to detect PrEP initially induced anxiety, with some perceptions of being intrusive and unwarranted. With counselling, however, participants found POC testing acceptable and beneficial. (2) Alignment of urine test results and adherence behaviours: Drug-level feedback aligned with what TGW knew about their adherence. Concurrence between pill taking and tenofovir detection in urine reinforced confidence in test accuracy. (3) Interpretation of urine tenofovir results: TGW familiar with the interpretation of oral-fluid HIV self-tests knew that two lines on the test device signified positivity (presence of HIV). However, two lines on the urine test strip indicated a positive result for non-adherence (absence of tenofovir), causing confusion. Research nurses explained the difference in test interpretation to participants' satisfaction. (4) White coat dosing: Some TGW deliberately chose not to attend scheduled clinic appointments to avoid detecting their PrEP non-adherence during urine testing. They restarted PrEP before returning to clinic, a behaviour called "white coat dosing." CONCLUSIONS: Incorporating POC urine testing into routine PrEP adherence counselling was acceptable and potentially beneficial for TGW but required attention to context. Additional research is needed to identify effective strategies for optimizing adherence monitoring and counselling for this population.
简介:使用新型替诺福韦检测点(POC)药物水平反馈进行依从性咨询,可能有助于预防暴露前(PrEP)的依从性;然而,尿液检测的看法及其对依从性的影响尚未得到充分研究。我们定性研究了乌干达跨性别女性(TGW)对 POC 替诺福韦检测的体验。
方法:在一项针对 HIV 阴性 TGW 的同伴提供 HIV 自我检测、性传播感染自我采样和 PrEP 的集群随机试验中(NCT04328025),我们对随机抽取的 30 名 TGW 进行了尿液 POC 检测的嵌套定性子研究(2021 年 8 月至 2022 年 2 月)。TGW 访谈探讨了:(1)POC 尿液替诺福韦检测的经验;(2)对药物水平反馈的 PrEP 依从性咨询的看法。我们使用了一种归纳内容分析方法进行分析。
结果:中位年龄为 21 岁(四分位距 20-24 岁),70%的人从事性工作。四个内容类别描述了 TGW 体验 POC 尿液替诺福韦检测的情况:(1)尿液替诺福韦检测最初受到怀疑:检测尿液以检测 PrEP 最初引起了焦虑,一些人认为这是侵入性的,没有必要。但是,经过咨询,参与者发现 POC 检测是可以接受的,也是有益的。(2)尿液检测结果与依从性行为的一致性:药物水平反馈与 TGW 对其依从性的了解一致。服用药物与尿液中检测到替诺福韦的一致性增强了对检测准确性的信心。(3)尿液替诺福韦检测结果的解释:熟悉口服液 HIV 自我检测解释的 TGW 知道测试设备上的两条线表示阳性(存在 HIV)。然而,尿液检测条上的两条线表示非依从性(缺乏替诺福韦)的阳性结果,这引起了困惑。研究护士向参与者解释了测试解释的区别,令他们感到满意。(4)白大衣剂量:一些 TGW 故意选择不参加预约的诊所就诊,以避免在尿液检测中发现自己的 PrEP 不依从。他们在返回诊所前重新开始服用 PrEP,这种行为称为“白大衣剂量”。
结论:将 POC 尿液检测纳入常规 PrEP 依从性咨询对 TGW 是可接受的,并且可能是有益的,但需要注意具体情况。需要进一步研究,以确定优化该人群的依从性监测和咨询的有效策略。
Lancet HIV. 2022-10