A modified pharmacy provider-led delivery model of oral HIV pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis in Kenya: a pilot study extension

IF 4.9 1区 医学 Q2 IMMUNOLOGY
Stephanie D. Roche, Victor Omollo, Peter Mogere, Magdaline Asewe, Stephen Gakuo, Preetika Banerjee, Kendall Harkey, Monisha Sharma, Jillian Pintye, Melissa Latigo Mugambi, Parth Shah, Josephine Odoyo, Patricia Ong'wen, Daniel Were, Elizabeth A. Bukusi, Kenneth Ngure, Katrina F. Ortblad
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction

Private pharmacies in Africa reach individuals with ongoing and periodic HIV risk, yet few countries currently leverage pharmacies as an HIV service delivery platform. We conducted a 6-month pilot to evaluate a model for pharmacy provider-led delivery of HIV pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP and PEP) in Kenya.

Methods

At 12 private pharmacies in Kisumu and Kiambu Counties, licensed pharmacy providers initiated and managed eligible clients ≥18 years on PrEP and PEP under remote clinician supervision (NCT04558554); four of these pharmacies additionally offered sextually transmitted infection (STI) testing. PrEP/PEP clients were scheduled for follow-up 1 month later and then quarterly (PrEP clients only). Primary outcomes included PrEP and PEP initiation and continuation during the pilot period. Client and providers rated the model across multiple constructs of acceptability and feasibility from established frameworks.

Results

From January to July 2022, 1028 clients interested in PrEP, PEP and/or STI testing were screened and 829 initiated one or more service: 661 PrEP, 162 PEP and 52 STI testing. About half of clients (48%, 398/829) were male, most were unmarried (78%, 644/829) and PrEP-naïve (89%, 737/829), and the median age was 25 years (IQR 22–31). Most PrEP clients reported inconsistent condom use (88%, 581/661) or sex with partners of unknown HIV status (70%, 460/661) in the past 6 months. Most PEP clients reported condomless sex (48%, 78/162) or a condom break (46%, 75/162) in the past 72 hours; 4% (6/162) reported sexual assault. Among PrEP clients eligible for a refill, 73% (479/658) refilled at least once and 60% (197/328) twice. Among PEP clients eligible for follow-up, 44% (65/148) completed follow-up HIV testing and 20% (30/148) transitioned to PrEP. Among STI clients, 19% (10/52) tested positive for gonorrhoea (n = 7) and/or chlamydia (n = 5). Most clients and providers (≥92%) found the delivery model and its implementation strategies acceptable. All providers (n = 12) thought it was possible to deliver PrEP and PEP at pharmacies in Kenya.

Conclusions

Pharmacy PrEP/PEP delivery achieved high uptake, continuation and acceptability among eligible clients that could benefit, highlighting the potential of pharmacies to expand HIV prevention service coverage in Kenya, particularly to individuals not accessing these services at clinics.

Abstract Image

肯尼亚由药房提供者主导的口服艾滋病毒暴露前和暴露后预防的改进交付模式:一项试点研究的扩展
非洲的私人药店为有持续和周期性艾滋病毒风险的个人提供服务,但目前很少有国家利用药店作为艾滋病毒服务提供平台。我们在肯尼亚开展了一项为期6个月的试点,以评估药房提供者主导的艾滋病毒暴露前和暴露后预防(PrEP和PEP)提供模式。方法在基苏木县和基安布县的12家私人药店,在临床医生的远程监督下,许可药房提供者发起并管理≥18岁的符合条件的客户使用PrEP和PEP (NCT04558554);其中四家药店还提供性传播感染(STI)检测。PrEP/PEP患者计划在1个月后随访,然后每季度随访一次(仅PrEP患者)。主要结果包括PrEP和PEP在试点期间的启动和继续。客户和提供者从已建立的框架中跨多个可接受性和可行性构造对模型进行评级。结果从2022年1月至7月,共筛查了1028名对PrEP、PEP和/或STI检测感兴趣的患者,其中829人开始了一项或多项服务:661人进行了PrEP检测,162人进行了PEP检测,52人进行了STI检测。约一半的患者(48%,398/829)为男性,大部分为未婚(78%,644/829)和PrEP-naïve(89%, 737/829),年龄中位数为25岁(IQR 22-31)。大多数PrEP客户报告在过去6个月内不一致使用安全套(88%,581/661)或与艾滋病毒感染状况未知的伴侣发生性行为(70%,460/661)。大多数PEP客户报告在过去72小时内发生过无安全套性行为(48%,78/162)或安全套破裂(46%,75/162);4%(6/162)报告性侵犯。在符合再填充条件的PrEP患者中,73%(479/658)至少再填充一次,60%(197/328)至少再填充两次。在符合随访条件的PEP患者中,44%(65/148)完成了HIV随访检测,20%(30/148)过渡到PrEP。在性传播感染患者中,19%(10/52)检测出淋病(n = 7)和衣原体(n = 5)阳性。大多数客户和提供者(≥92%)认为交付模式及其实施策略是可接受的。所有提供者(n = 12)都认为在肯尼亚的药店提供PrEP和PEP是可能的。结论药房PrEP/PEP的提供在符合条件的客户中获得了较高的接受度、持续性和可接受性,这可能会受益,突出了药店扩大肯尼亚艾滋病毒预防服务覆盖面的潜力,特别是对无法在诊所获得这些服务的个人。
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来源期刊
Journal of the International AIDS Society
Journal of the International AIDS Society IMMUNOLOGY-INFECTIOUS DISEASES
CiteScore
8.60
自引率
10.00%
发文量
186
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the International AIDS Society (JIAS) is a peer-reviewed and Open Access journal for the generation and dissemination of evidence from a wide range of disciplines: basic and biomedical sciences; behavioural sciences; epidemiology; clinical sciences; health economics and health policy; operations research and implementation sciences; and social sciences and humanities. Submission of HIV research carried out in low- and middle-income countries is strongly encouraged.
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