Empirical Development of a Behavioral Intervention for African American/Black and Latino Persons with Unsuppressed HIV Viral Load Levels: An Application of the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST) Using Cost-Effectiveness as an Optimization Objective.
Jonathan P FeelemyerR Scott BraithwaiteQinlian ZhouCharles M ClelandPrima Manandhar-SasakiLeo WiltonAmanda RitchieLinda M CollinsMarya V GwadzPublished in: AIDS and behavior (2024)
We used results from an optimization randomized controlled trial which tested five behavioral intervention components to support HIV antiretroviral adherence/HIV viral suppression, grounded in the multiphase optimization strategy and using a fractional factorial design to identify intervention components with cost-effectiveness sufficiently favorable for scalability. Results were incorporated into a validated HIV computer simulation to simulate longer-term effects of combinations of components on health and costs. We simulated the 32 corresponding long-term trajectories for viral load suppression, health related quality of life (HRQoL), and costs. The components were designed to be culturally and structurally salient. They were: motivational interviewing counseling sessions (MI), pre-adherence skill building (SB), peer mentorship (PM), focused support groups (SG), and patient navigation (short version [NS], long version [NL]. All participants also received health education on HIV treatment. We examined four scenarios: one-time intervention with and without discounting and continuous interventions with and without discounting. In all four scenarios, interventions that comprise or include SB and NL (and including health education) were cost effective (< $100,000/quality-adjusted life year). Further, with consideration of HRQoL impact, maximal intervention became cost-effective enough to be scalable. Thus, a fractional factorial experiment coupled with cost-effectiveness analysis is a promising approach to optimize multi-component interventions for scalability. The present study can guide service planning efforts for HIV care settings and health departments.
Keyphrases
- randomized controlled trial
- hiv positive
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv infected
- healthcare
- hiv testing
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv aids
- men who have sex with men
- public health
- hepatitis c virus
- mental health
- african american
- hiv infected patients
- south africa
- health information
- climate change
- quality improvement
- physical activity
- study protocol
- sars cov
- preterm infants
- type diabetes
- depressive symptoms
- body composition
- clinical trial
- health promotion
- systematic review
- air pollution
- deep learning
- resistance training
- high intensity