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Rapid Testing and Counseling Research within the CTN

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Dan Feaster, Debbie Orr, Tiffany Kyle, Lauren Gooden, Florida Node ... Janet Levy, JJ Pan and Paul Wakim, NIDA. Carl Pieper, Dan Blazer, Maureen Cunningham, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rapid Testing and Counseling Research within the CTN


1
Rapid Testing and Counseling Research within the
CTN
  • Lisa Metsch, Ph.D.
  • James L Sorensen, Ph.D.
  • Grant Colfax, M.D.
  • Jose Szapocznik, Ph.D.
  • Susan Tross, Ph.D.
  • Raul Mandler, M.D.

2
Other Collaborators
  • Dan Feaster, Debbie Orr, Tiffany Kyle, Lauren
    Gooden, Florida Node
  • Tim Matheson, California and Arizona Node
  • Louise Haynes, South Carolina Node
  • Paul McLaughlin, New England Node
  • Janet Levy, JJ Pan and Paul Wakim, NIDA
  • Carl Pieper, Dan Blazer, Maureen Cunningham,
    Craig McClendon and Curtis Campbell, DCRI
  • Carol Wenck and Karen Nesmith, EMMES
  • Bernard Branson, CDC, Technical Consultant

3
HIV Rapid Test
  • FDA approved
  • Only requires blood from a finger stick or oral
    fluid from a swab
  • Results in 20 minutes
  • Does not require laboratory facilities and can be
    done by drug counselors
  • Positive results require confirmatory testing

4
Late HIV Testing is CommonSupplement to HIV/AIDS
Surveillance, 2000-2003
  • Among 4,127 persons with HIV/AIDS, 45 were
    diagnosed AIDS within 12 months after finding out
    HIV positive status (late testers)
  • Late testers, compared to those tested early (gt5
    yrs before AIDS diagnosis) were more likely to
    be
  • Younger (18-29 yrs)
  • Heterosexual
  • Less educated
  • African American or Hispanic

MMWR June 27, 2003
16 states
5
Benefits of Widespread HIV Screening
  • Decreases spread of HIV An HIV diagnosis is
    associated with reduction in high risk sexual and
    injection behaviors
  • Improves survival Linkage to care and treatment
  • May reduce the stigma that is associated with
    testing based on risk

6
Offering HIV Testing in Outpatient Health Care
Settings
  • CDC now recommends offering routine HIV testing
    to persons regardless of risk factors
  • Emergency Departments
  • Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STD) Clinics
  • Labor and Delivery
  • Correctional Facilities
  • Offices of Primary Care Physicians
  • Substance Abuse Treatment Clinics

7
The Case for Drug Treatment.
  • Fewer than 1/3 of U.S drug treatment programs
    offer HIV testing and counseling
  • Less than ½ of CTN CTPs made HIV testing
    available either in the CTP, through referral or
    outsourced
  • CTN provides an ideal setting to introduce
    routine, on-site rapid HIV testing and counseling

SAMSHA, 2004 Brown et al. JSAT, 2006 Pollack
et al., 2006
8
Need for Scientific Studies
  • CDC and new guidelines are moving away from HIV
    counseling at the time of testing
  • Scientific study is needed to evaluate the
    effectiveness of offering HIV rapid testing
    counseling in drug treatment programs
  • Effect on getting people tested
  • Effect on sexual risk behaviors

9
David Holtgrave Costs and Consequences of the
New CDC Testing Guidelines (June, 2007
www.plosmedicine. org)
  • Article questions costs and consequences of new
    CDC guidelines regarding routine HIV testing
    without risk reduction counseling (compared with
    a more targeted counseling and testing strategy)
  • Uses scenario and cost-effectiveness analysis
  • Concludes that abandoning counseling would have
    real public health consequences in terms of HIV
    infections that could have been averted

10
David Holtgrave Costs and Consequences of the
New CDC Testing Guidelines (June, 2007
www.plosmedicine. org)
  • Editors note says that Holtgrave article
  • has a major limitation in that it tried to
    predict what might happen in the future it did
    not study the actual impact of the two different
    types of testing on a group of people.

11
Research Questions
  • Among persons who attend substance abuse
    treatment and report being HIV negative or not
    knowing their status
  • (1) What is the more effective testing strategy
    to ensure they get HIV tested and receive their
    results?
  • (2) What is the more effective testing strategy
    to decrease their risk behaviors?

12
Three Testing Strategies to be evaluated in 3 arm
RCT
  • Offer on-site HIV rapid testing (via oral fluid)
    with brief participant-tailored prevention
    counseling
  • Offer on-site HIV rapid testing (via oral fluid)
    with information only
  • Offer referral for HIV testing in the community

13
CTN 0032 PROTOCOL DEVELOPMENTHIV Rapid Testing
and Counseling
  • Protocol Concept approved by CTN, then by Dr.
    Volkow in November, 2006
  • Protocol Development is in progress
  • Informal surveys of CTPs, February May, 2007
  • Amount of testing? On site? How recent?
  • Protocol was reviewed by DSMB in July, 2007
  • Revisions expected to be made in
    August/September, 2007

14
Interest in Health Services Research Ancillary
Studies
  • Feasibility of implementing HIV rapid testing and
    counseling in drug tx
  • Acceptability by drug counselors of conducting
    HIV rapid testing in drug tx
  • Durability of providing HIV rapid testing and
    counseling after CTN study is completed.

15
IN SUMMARY
  • Significant changes in HIV testing and counseling
  • Technology, Policy, and Ethical Challenges
  • Study of HIV Rapid Testing and Counseling being
    planned
  • Need information (need research)
  • Impact on drug use, other risk factors
  • Feasibility of large-scale testing in treatment
    programs
  • Best-practice solutions to ethical quandries
  • These are Vital Issues in need of attention

16
  • We welcome your questions and suggestions
  • Lisa Metsch, Ph.D.
  • Lmetsch_at_med.miami.edu
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