Differentiated prevention and care to reduce the risk of HIV acquisition and transmission among female sex workers in Zimbabwe: Study Protocol for the ‘AMETHIST’ cluster randomised trial

Frances Cowan, Fortunate Machingura, Sungai T. Chabata, M. Sanni Ali, Joanna Busza, Richard Steen, Nicola Desmond, Maryam Shahmanesh, Paul Revill, Amon Mpofu, Raymond Yekeye, Owen Mugurungi, Andrew N. Phillips, James R. Hargreaves

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background

Female sex workers (FSW) in sub-Saharan Africa are disproportionately affected by HIV and are critical to engage in HIV prevention, testing and care services. We describe the design of our evaluation of the “AMETHIST” intervention, nested within a nationally-scaled programme for FSW in Zimbabwe. We hypothesise that the implementation of this intervention will result in a reduction in the risk of HIV transmission within sex work.

Methods

The AMETHIST intervention (Adapted Microplanning to Eliminate Transmission of HIV in Sex Transactions) is a risk-differentiated intervention for FSW, centred around the implementation of microplanning and self-help groups. It is designed to support uptake of, and adherence to, HIV prevention, testing and treatment behaviours among FSW. Twenty-two towns in Zimbabwe were randomised to receive either the Sisters programme (usual care) or the Sisters programme plus AMETHIST. The composite primary outcome is defined as the proportion of all FSW who are at risk of either HIV acquisition (HIV-negative and not fully protected by prevention interventions) or of HIV transmission (HIV-positive, not virally suppressed and not practicing consistent condom use). The outcome will be assessed after two years of intervention delivery in a respondent-driven sampling survey (total n=4400; n=200 FSW recruited at each site). Primary analysis will use the ‘RDS-II’ method to estimate cluster summaries and will adapt Hayes and Moulton’s ‘2-step’ method produce adjusted effect estimates. An in-depth process evaluation guided by our project trajectory will be undertaken.

Discussion

Innovative pragmatic trials are needed to generate evidence on effectiveness of combination interventions in HIV prevention and treatment in different contexts. We describe the design and analysis of such a study.

Original languageEnglish
Article number209
Pages (from-to)e209
JournalTrials
Volume23
Issue number1
Early online date12 Mar 2022
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 12 Mar 2022

Keywords

  • Effectiveness
  • Hidden population
  • Pragmatic trials
  • Randomised control trial
  • Respondent driven sampling
  • Sex workers

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