Summary

Eligibility
for males ages 18-70 (full criteria)
Location
at San Francisco, California
Dates
study started
study ends around
Principal Investigator
by Matthew Spinelli, MD, MAS
Headshot of Matthew Spinelli
Matthew Spinelli

Description

Summary

Men who are living with HIV and use stimulants face many challenges and barriers that may interfere with remembering to take their HIV medication. Forgetting to take HIV medication puts men living with HIV at a greater risk of becoming virally unsuppressed. Researchers are doing this study to test if a remote intervention can help participants improve remembering to take their HIV medications and reduce the HIV viral load among men living with HIV who use stimulants.

Official Title

Reactive Driven Support for Treatment, Adherence, Resilience, and Thriving (reSTART) mHealth Randomized Controlled Hybrid Type I Effectiveness Implementation Trial

Details

A resurgent stimulant epidemic among men living with HIV could compromise the U.S. Ending the HIV Epidemic goals by interfering with HIV care engagement, adherence, and virologic suppression among men living with HIV. Prominent multi-level factors interfere with HIV virologic suppression for men living with HIV, particularly among those who use stimulants. This study is a nested randomized clinical trial to test a multi-component intervention to improve virologic suppression, adherence, and stimulant use among men living with HIV who use stimulants. The intervention, known as reSTART, will combine an evidence-based positive affect mobile health (mHealth) intervention, a home-based urine point-of-care test for adherence self-monitoring, and motivational interviewing and messages. The goal of the reSTART intervention is to improve or maintain adherence to HIV medications and reduce stimulant use. By this high-impact study's end, the investigators will have identified the impact of a multi-component reSTART mHealth intervention using novel point-of-care adherence self-monitoring on HIV virologic suppression and stimulant use.

Keywords

Behavioral Intervention, Viral Suppression of HIV Infection, ART Adherence, HIV, Stimulant Use, mHealth, HIV Infections, Tenofovir, reSTART Objective Adherence Self-Monitoring and Postive Affect mHealth Intervention, urine tenofovir point-of-care self-test

Eligibility

You can join if…

Open to males ages 18-70

  • Prescribed antiretroviral therapy (ART) with a tenofovir-based regimen.
  • Documented virologic non-suppression, urine tenofovir testing without tenofovir detected, or self-reported adherence <90%.
  • Reports stimulant use.
  • Has a mailing address within the U.S.
  • Currently has a smartphone with photo capabilities.

You CAN'T join if...

  • Have any health condition that may interfere with participation or the ability to provide informed consent, including any debilitating or life-threatening conditions.
  • Not prescribed ART.
  • Unwilling to perform urine self-testing or to attend a local Quest site for viral load monitoring.
  • Unable to provide a hair sample of ~50-100 strands of hair that are non-gray, not bleached, and at least 1cm in length

Location

  • UCSF
    San Francisco California 94110 United States

Lead Scientist at UCSF

  • Matthew Spinelli, MD, MAS
    I am HIV/ID physician with training in implementation science methods who uses these approaches to support pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) implementation, PrEP/HIV ART adherence, and PrEP persistence/HIV retention in care. A key tool we are using in this work is a point-of-care urine tenofovir test that can provide real-time adherence information to clinicians to drive adherence interventions.

Details

Status
not yet accepting patients
Start Date
Completion Date
(estimated)
Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco
ID
NCT07125235
Study Type
Interventional
Participants
Expecting 270 study participants
Last Updated