Williams Michael P, Manjourides Justin, Smith Louisa H, Rainer Crissi B, Hightow-Weidman Lisa, Haley Danielle F
Center for Health Outcomes and Interdisciplinary Research, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
AIDS Behav. 2025 May 6. doi: 10.1007/s10461-025-04722-x.
Adherence to Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) among young sexual and gender minority men who have sex with men (YSGMMSM) has been suboptimal for reducing HIV incidence in the United States. Using the syndemic framework, the present study characterized how neighborhood disadvantage and clustering of two or more syndemic conditions (depression, anxiety, polysubstance use, history of arrest, BIPOC racial identity, unemployment) was related to PrEP non-adherence among 212 YSGMMSM aged 16-24. This study is a secondary analysis of an efficacy trial testing a PrEP adherence digital intervention for YSGMMSM combining participant survey and biological PrEP adherence data with measures of neighborhood disadvantage. Using multilevel models, we found that YSGMMSM residing in high-disadvantage neighborhoods were 2.79 (CI = 1.11, 7.00) times more likely to have a cluster of syndemic conditions compared to those in low-disadvantage neighborhoods. YSGMMSM residing in high-disadvantage neighborhoods were 3.14 (OR = 3.14, CI = 1.17, 8.44) times more likely to be PrEP non-adherent. YSGMMSM with two or more syndemic conditions were 2.64 (CI = 1.01, 6.94) times more likely to be PrEP non-adherent compared to those with 0 or 1 condition. Among participants living in high-disadvantage neighborhoods, 38% had a cluster of a syndemic conditions compared 20% in low-disadvantage neighborhoods. Despite this, neighborhood disadvantage did not significantly moderate the relationship between clustering of syndemic conditions and PrEP non-adherence among YSGMMSM. Further research into multilevel syndemic influences on PrEP adherence is needed to develop strategies for improving HIV vulnerability among YSGMMSM.
在美国,年轻的男男性行为者(YSGMMSM)对暴露前预防(PrEP)的依从性欠佳,难以有效降低艾滋病毒感染率。本研究采用综合征框架,对212名年龄在16至24岁的YSGMMSM进行分析,探讨社区劣势以及两种或更多综合征状况(抑郁、焦虑、多种物质使用、被捕史、有色人种身份、失业)的聚集与PrEP不依从之间的关系。本研究是一项疗效试验的二次分析,该试验测试了一种针对YSGMMSM的PrEP依从性数字干预措施,将参与者调查和生物学PrEP依从性数据与社区劣势指标相结合。通过多层次模型,我们发现,与生活在低劣势社区的YSGMMSM相比,生活在高劣势社区的YSGMMSM出现综合征状况聚集的可能性要高2.79倍(CI = 1.11, 7.00)。生活在高劣势社区的YSGMMSM不依从PrEP的可能性要高3.14倍(OR = 3.14, CI = 1.17, 8.44)。与没有或仅有1种综合征状况的YSGMMSM相比,有两种或更多综合征状况的YSGMMSM不依从PrEP的可能性要高2.64倍(CI = 1.01, 6.94)。在生活在高劣势社区的参与者中,38%出现了综合征状况聚集,而在低劣势社区这一比例为20%。尽管如此,社区劣势并未显著调节YSGMMSM中综合征状况聚集与PrEP不依从之间的关系。需要进一步研究多层次综合征对PrEP依从性的影响,以制定改善YSGMMSM艾滋病毒易感性的策略。