A Mobile Health Strategy to Support Adherence to Antiretroviral Preexposure Prophylaxis

Jonathan D Fuchs, Kristefer Stojanovski, Eric Vittinghoff, Vanessa M McMahan, Sybill G Hosek, K Rivet Amico, Aminta Kouyate, Hailey J Gilmore, Susan P Buchbinder, Richard T Lester, Robert M Grant, Albert Y Liu, Jonathan D Fuchs, Kristefer Stojanovski, Eric Vittinghoff, Vanessa M McMahan, Sybill G Hosek, K Rivet Amico, Aminta Kouyate, Hailey J Gilmore, Susan P Buchbinder, Richard T Lester, Robert M Grant, Albert Y Liu

Abstract

Preexposure prophylaxis is a highly protective HIV prevention strategy, yet nonadherence can significantly reduce its effectiveness. We conducted a mixed methods evaluation of a mobile health intervention (iText) that utilized weekly bidirectional text or e-mail support messages to encourage preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) adherence among participants in the multi-site iPrEx open-label extension study. A convenience sample of PrEP users from the San Francisco and Chicago sites participated in a 12-week pilot study. Fifty-six men who have sex with men were enrolled; a quarter of them were less than 30 years of age, 13% were black/African American, 11% were Latino, and most (88%) completed some college. Two-thirds opted for text message delivery. Of the 667 messages sent, only 1 individual requested support; initial nonresponse was observed in 22% and was higher among e-mail compared to text message recipients. Poststudy, a majority of participants would recommend the intervention to others, especially during PrEP initiation. Moreover, younger participants and men of color were more likely to report that they would use the iText strategy if it were available to them. Several participants commented that while they were aware that the messages were automated, they felt supported and encouraged that "someone was always there." Study staff reported that the intervention is feasible to administer and can be incorporated readily into clinic flow. A pre-post intervention regression discontinuity analysis using clinic-based pill counts showed a 50% reduction in missed doses [95% confidence interval (CI) 16-71; p = 0.008] and 77% (95% CI 33-92; p = 0.007) when comparing pill counts at quarterly visits just before and after iText enrollment. A mobile health intervention using weekly bidirectional messaging was highly acceptable and demonstrated promising effects on PrEP adherence warranting further evaluation for efficacy in a randomized controlled trial.

Keywords: HIV; adherence; mobile health; preexposure prophylaxis; text messaging.

Conflict of interest statement

No conflicting financial interests exist.

Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
The iText bidirectional messaging algorithm.
FIG. 2.
FIG. 2.
Study enrollment.

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Source: PubMed

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