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Innovative administration of long-acting injectables for HIV treatment enhancement at home (INVITE-HOME): implementation science study protocol

Por: Bourdeau · B. · Rebchook · G. · Shade · S. B. · OShea · J. · Buchacz · K. · Harris · O. · Johnson · M. O. · Palomares · M. · Bolton · A. T. · Van Nuys · J. · Moore · E. · Saberi · P.
Introduction

There is high interest in long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy (LAI-ART) among people with HIV (PWH), with many conveniences for uptake and persistence. However, both patients and clinicians have expressed important barriers to effective implementation, including concerns about frequent clinic visits and strain on clinic resources. Administration of LAI-ART by a trained layperson injector (such as family, friend or partner of the patient) can help mitigate some of these patient-identified and clinician-identified barriers. Alternative LAI-ART delivery methods have the potential to increase the PWH and layperson injector’s confidence, empowerment, convenience, privacy and self-management skills and ultimately facilitate LAI-ART uptake and persistence.

Methods and analysis

INVITE-Home (innovative administration of long-acting injectables for HIV treatment enhancement at home) will support the expansion of LAI-ART in non-clinical settings by developing, implementing and evaluating a comprehensive, theory-informed training to support the administration of LAI-ART by a trained layperson injector. First, INVITE-Home will design and develop an innovative, theory-based layperson injector training to improve acceptability and uptake of LAI-ART in home-based settings, grounded in qualitative evaluation of training barriers and needs of PWH, layperson injectors and clinicians to develop the training. In Aim 2, INVITE-Home will enhance understanding of home-based LAI-ART using the training, by examining implementation and effectiveness of home-based LAI-ART injections.

Ethics and dissemination

This study and its protocols have been approved by the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Institutional Review Board and the scientific staff of HIV Research Branch, Division of HIV Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention, at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Study staff will disseminate findings locally (eg, to partnering clinics, via the UCSF Center for AIDS Prevention Studies’ Community Engagement Core), statewide (eg, the California Department of Public Health’s Office of AIDS) and nationally at conferences related to HIV.

Trial registration number

NCT06488846.

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