Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trial

Background: Although several interventions have shown reduced HIV incidence in clinical trials, the community-level effect of effective interventions on the epidemic when scaled up is unknown. We investigated whether a multicomponent, multilevel social and behavioural prevention strategy could redu...

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Main Authors: Prof. Thomas J Coates, PhD, Michal Kulich, PhD, Prof. David D Celentano, ScD, Carla E Zelaya, PhD, Prof. Suwat Chariyalertsak, MD, Alfred Chingono, MSc, Glenda Gray, MBBCH, Jessie K K Mbwambo, MD, Prof. Stephen F Morin, PhD, Prof. Linda Richter, PhD, Michael Sweat, PhD, Heidi van Rooyen, PhD, Nuala McGrath, ScD, Agnès Fiamma, MIPH, Oliver Laeyendecker, PhD, Estelle Piwowar-Manning, BS, Greg Szekeres, BA, Deborah Donnell, PhD, Prof. Susan H Eshleman, MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-05-01
Series:The Lancet Global Health
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214109X14700324
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author Prof. Thomas J Coates, PhD
Michal Kulich, PhD
Prof. David D Celentano, ScD
Carla E Zelaya, PhD
Prof. Suwat Chariyalertsak, MD
Alfred Chingono, MSc
Glenda Gray, MBBCH
Jessie K K Mbwambo, MD
Prof. Stephen F Morin, PhD
Prof. Linda Richter, PhD
Michael Sweat, PhD
Heidi van Rooyen, PhD
Nuala McGrath, ScD
Agnès Fiamma, MIPH
Oliver Laeyendecker, PhD
Estelle Piwowar-Manning, BS
Greg Szekeres, BA
Deborah Donnell, PhD
Prof. Susan H Eshleman, MD
spellingShingle Prof. Thomas J Coates, PhD
Michal Kulich, PhD
Prof. David D Celentano, ScD
Carla E Zelaya, PhD
Prof. Suwat Chariyalertsak, MD
Alfred Chingono, MSc
Glenda Gray, MBBCH
Jessie K K Mbwambo, MD
Prof. Stephen F Morin, PhD
Prof. Linda Richter, PhD
Michael Sweat, PhD
Heidi van Rooyen, PhD
Nuala McGrath, ScD
Agnès Fiamma, MIPH
Oliver Laeyendecker, PhD
Estelle Piwowar-Manning, BS
Greg Szekeres, BA
Deborah Donnell, PhD
Prof. Susan H Eshleman, MD
Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trial
The Lancet Global Health
author_facet Prof. Thomas J Coates, PhD
Michal Kulich, PhD
Prof. David D Celentano, ScD
Carla E Zelaya, PhD
Prof. Suwat Chariyalertsak, MD
Alfred Chingono, MSc
Glenda Gray, MBBCH
Jessie K K Mbwambo, MD
Prof. Stephen F Morin, PhD
Prof. Linda Richter, PhD
Michael Sweat, PhD
Heidi van Rooyen, PhD
Nuala McGrath, ScD
Agnès Fiamma, MIPH
Oliver Laeyendecker, PhD
Estelle Piwowar-Manning, BS
Greg Szekeres, BA
Deborah Donnell, PhD
Prof. Susan H Eshleman, MD
author_sort Prof. Thomas J Coates, PhD
title Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trial
title_short Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trial
title_full Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trial
title_fullStr Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trial
title_full_unstemmed Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trial
title_sort effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on hiv incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (nimh project accept; hptn 043): a cluster-randomised trial
publisher Elsevier
series The Lancet Global Health
issn 2214-109X
publishDate 2014-05-01
description Background: Although several interventions have shown reduced HIV incidence in clinical trials, the community-level effect of effective interventions on the epidemic when scaled up is unknown. We investigated whether a multicomponent, multilevel social and behavioural prevention strategy could reduce HIV incidence, increase HIV testing, reduce HIV risk behaviour, and change social and behavioural norms. Methods: For this phase 3 cluster-randomised controlled trial, 34 communities in four sites in Africa and 14 communities in Thailand were randomly allocated in matched pairs to receive 36 months of community-based voluntary counselling and testing for HIV (intervention group) or standard counselling and testing alone (control group) between January, 2001, and December, 2011. The intervention was designed to make testing more accessible in communities, engage communities through outreach, and provide support services after testing. Randomisation was done by a computer-generated code and was not masked. Data were collected at baseline (n=14 567) and after intervention (n=56 683) by cross-sectional random surveys of community residents aged 18–32 years. The primary outcome was HIV incidence and was estimated with a cross-sectional multi-assay algorithm and antiretroviral drug screening assay. Thailand was excluded from incidence analyses because of low HIV prevalence. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00203749. Findings: The estimated incidence of HIV in the intervention group was 1·52% versus 1·81% in the control group with an estimated reduction in HIV incidence of 13·9% (relative risk [RR] 0·86, 95% CI 0·73–1·02; p=0·082). HIV incidence was significantly reduced in women older than 24 years (RR=0·70, 0·54–0·90; p=0·0085), but not in other age or sex subgroups. Community-based voluntary counselling and testing increased testing rates by 25% overall (12–39; p=0·0003), by 45% (25–69; p<0·0001) in men and 15% (3–28; p=0·013) in women. No overall effect on sexual risk behaviour was recorded. Social norms regarding HIV testing were improved by 6% (95% CI 3–9) in communities in the intervention group. Interpretation: These results are sufficiently robust, especially when taking into consideration the combined results of modest reductions in HIV incidence combined with increases in HIV testing and reductions in HIV risk behaviour, to recommend the Project Accept approach as an integral part of all interventions (including treatment as prevention) to reduce HIV transmission at the community level. Funding: US National Institute of Mental Health, the Division of AIDS of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and the Office of AIDS Research of the US National Institutes of Health.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214109X14700324
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spelling doaj-391e5638daf046e0ae337fb3cf67857b2020-11-25T01:11:09ZengElsevierThe Lancet Global Health2214-109X2014-05-0125e267e27710.1016/S2214-109X(14)70032-4Effect of community-based voluntary counselling and testing on HIV incidence and social and behavioural outcomes (NIMH Project Accept; HPTN 043): a cluster-randomised trialProf. Thomas J Coates, PhD0Michal Kulich, PhD1Prof. David D Celentano, ScD2Carla E Zelaya, PhD3Prof. Suwat Chariyalertsak, MD4Alfred Chingono, MSc5Glenda Gray, MBBCH6Jessie K K Mbwambo, MD7Prof. Stephen F Morin, PhD8Prof. Linda Richter, PhD9Michael Sweat, PhD10Heidi van Rooyen, PhD11Nuala McGrath, ScD12Agnès Fiamma, MIPH13Oliver Laeyendecker, PhD14Estelle Piwowar-Manning, BS15Greg Szekeres, BA16Deborah Donnell, PhD17Prof. Susan H Eshleman, MD18University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA Center for World Health, Los Angeles, CA, USACharles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Prague, Czech RepublicJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, Baltimore, MD, USAJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, Baltimore, MD, USAChiang Mai University, Research Institute for Health Sciences, Chiang Mai, ThailandUniversity of Zimbabwe, College of Health Sciences, Harare, ZimbabweUniversity of the Witwatersrand, Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital, Faculty of Health Sciences, Perinatal HIV Research Unit, Soweto, South AfricaMuhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, Muhimbili University Teaching Hospital, Dar es Salaam, TanzaniaUniversity of California, San Francisco, Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, San Francisco, CA, USAHuman Sciences Research Council, Dalbridge, South AfricaMedical University of South Carolina, Family Services Research Center, Charleston, SC, USAHuman Sciences Research Council, Durban, South AfricaUniversity of Southampton, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, UKUniversity of California, Los Angeles, UCLA Center for World Health, Los Angeles, CA, USAJohns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USADepartment of Pathology, Baltimore, MD, USAUniversity of California, Los Angeles, UCLA Center for World Health, Los Angeles, CA, USAFred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA, USADepartment of Pathology, Baltimore, MD, USA Background: Although several interventions have shown reduced HIV incidence in clinical trials, the community-level effect of effective interventions on the epidemic when scaled up is unknown. We investigated whether a multicomponent, multilevel social and behavioural prevention strategy could reduce HIV incidence, increase HIV testing, reduce HIV risk behaviour, and change social and behavioural norms. Methods: For this phase 3 cluster-randomised controlled trial, 34 communities in four sites in Africa and 14 communities in Thailand were randomly allocated in matched pairs to receive 36 months of community-based voluntary counselling and testing for HIV (intervention group) or standard counselling and testing alone (control group) between January, 2001, and December, 2011. The intervention was designed to make testing more accessible in communities, engage communities through outreach, and provide support services after testing. Randomisation was done by a computer-generated code and was not masked. Data were collected at baseline (n=14 567) and after intervention (n=56 683) by cross-sectional random surveys of community residents aged 18–32 years. The primary outcome was HIV incidence and was estimated with a cross-sectional multi-assay algorithm and antiretroviral drug screening assay. Thailand was excluded from incidence analyses because of low HIV prevalence. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00203749. Findings: The estimated incidence of HIV in the intervention group was 1·52% versus 1·81% in the control group with an estimated reduction in HIV incidence of 13·9% (relative risk [RR] 0·86, 95% CI 0·73–1·02; p=0·082). HIV incidence was significantly reduced in women older than 24 years (RR=0·70, 0·54–0·90; p=0·0085), but not in other age or sex subgroups. Community-based voluntary counselling and testing increased testing rates by 25% overall (12–39; p=0·0003), by 45% (25–69; p<0·0001) in men and 15% (3–28; p=0·013) in women. No overall effect on sexual risk behaviour was recorded. Social norms regarding HIV testing were improved by 6% (95% CI 3–9) in communities in the intervention group. Interpretation: These results are sufficiently robust, especially when taking into consideration the combined results of modest reductions in HIV incidence combined with increases in HIV testing and reductions in HIV risk behaviour, to recommend the Project Accept approach as an integral part of all interventions (including treatment as prevention) to reduce HIV transmission at the community level. Funding: US National Institute of Mental Health, the Division of AIDS of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and the Office of AIDS Research of the US National Institutes of Health. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214109X14700324