Effects of behavioural interventions on postpartum retention and adherence among women with HIV on lifelong ART: the results of a cluster randomized trial in Kenya (the MOTIVATE trial)

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Study Justification:
The MOTIVATE trial aimed to evaluate the impact of two behavioral interventions on postpartum retention and adherence among women with HIV in Kenya. Retention in HIV care and adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) are crucial for the health outcomes of women and infants. This study aimed to determine if text messaging and community-based mentor mothers (cMM) interventions could improve postpartum retention and adherence in this population.
Highlights:
– The study enrolled 1331 pregnant women with HIV in Kenya.
– At 12 months postpartum, 85.6% of women were retained in care, 7.2% were lost to follow-up, and 7.1% were discontinued from the study.
– In intention-to-treat analyses, the interventions did not significantly improve retention at 12 months postpartum compared to standard care.
– However, in per-protocol analyses, women who received at least 80% of the expected intervention had a 24-29% higher risk of retention compared to the control arm.
– The cMM and text messaging intervention had significantly lower rates of loss to follow-up.
– Women who were lost to follow-up were younger, less likely to be married, and more likely to be newly diagnosed with HIV during pregnancy.
– Self-reported ART adherence did not vary by study arm.
Recommendations:
– Higher levels of exposure to the interventions may be necessary to achieve the desired effects on postpartum retention and adherence.
– Future interventions should consider strategies to improve retention and adherence among younger women, unmarried women, and those newly diagnosed with HIV during pregnancy.
Key Role Players:
– Researchers and study staff
– Kenyan Ministry of Health
– Health facility staff
– Mentor mothers
– Community health workers
– HIV care providers
Cost Items for Planning Recommendations:
– Training and supervision of mentor mothers and community health workers
– Text messaging software and delivery costs
– Transportation and logistics for home visits and community-based interventions
– Data collection and analysis
– Research staff salaries and benefits
– Communication and dissemination of study findings
Please note that the above information is a summary of the study and its findings. For more detailed information, please refer to the publication in the Journal of the International AIDS Society, Volume 25, No. 1, Year 2022.

The strength of evidence for this abstract is 7 out of 10.
The evidence in the abstract is rated 7 because it provides detailed information about the study design, interventions, outcomes, and statistical analyses. However, it does not provide specific results or effect sizes for the primary outcomes, which limits the ability to fully evaluate the strength of the evidence. To improve the evidence, the abstract could include the specific results for retention in care and ART adherence at 12 months postpartum, as well as the effect sizes and confidence intervals for the intervention arms compared to the control arm.

Introduction: Retention in HIV care and adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) during pregnancy and postpartum for women living with HIV (WLWH) are necessary to optimize health outcomes for women and infants. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of two evidenced-based behavioural interventions on postpartum adherence and retention in WLWH in Kenya. Methods: The Mother-Infant Visit Adherence and Treatment Engagement (MOTIVATE) study was a cluster-randomized trial enrolling pregnant WLWH from December 2015 to August 2017. Twenty-four health facilities in southwestern Kenya were randomized to: (1) standard care (control), (2) text-messaging, (3) community-based mentor mothers (cMM) or (4) text-messaging and cMM. Primary outcomes included retention in care and ART adherence at 12 months postpartum. Analyses utilized generalized estimating equations and competing risks regression. Per-protocol analyses examined differences in postpartum retention for women with high versus low levels of exposure to the interventions. Results: We enrolled 1331 pregnant WLWH (mean age 28 years). At 12 months postpartum, 1140 (85.6%) women were retained in care, 96 women (7.2%) were lost-to-follow-up (LTFU) and 95 (7.1%) were discontinued from the study. In intention-to-treat analyses, the relative risk of being retained at 12-months postpartum was not significantly higher in the intervention arms versus the control arm. In time-to-event analysis, the cMM and text arm had significantly lower rates of LTFU (hazard ratio 0.44, p = 0.019). In per-protocol analysis, the relative risk of 12-month postpartum retention was 24–29% higher for women receiving at least 80% of the expected intervention compared to the control arm; text message only risk ratio (RR) 1.24 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.16–1.32, p<0.001), cMM only RR 1.29 (95% CI 1.21–1.37, p<0.001) and cMM plus text RR 1.29 (1.21–1.37, p<0.001). Women LTFU were younger (p<0.001), less likely to be married (p<0.001) and more likely to be newly diagnosed with HIV during pregnancy (p95% of pills taken since last clinic visit), fair (85–94%) or poor (95% of women reported good adherence throughout the study, this was compared versus combined fair or poor adherence. Secondary outcomes included viral suppression and infant outcomes. Viral load was added as a secondary measurement of adherence after routine viral load monitoring was introduced in Kenya after the study launched, and was obtained through health records. Per the Kenya National ART guidelines, viral load was obtained by clinic providers after 6 months of ART for those newly initiating (or at time of pregnancy identification for those already on ART) and every 6 months until cessation of breastfeeding [22]. Those with viral load <1000 copies/ml were considered virally suppressed. Retention in care at 12 months postpartum was defined as the proportion of women who had an HIV care visit within 90 days at 12 months after delivery. Women with documented transfer to another clinic, which required an official transfer letter, were considered retained in care. Women who died, experienced a pregnancy loss or child death, or withdrew were discontinued from the study and their data were used up until study discontinuation. The study was powered based on estimated differences in proportions of maternal ART adherence and retention in the intervention versus the control arms at 12 months postpartum accounting for clustering as previously reported [19, 27]. We estimated a baseline ART adherence rate of 55% based on pre‐universal ART rates found in the literature for pregnant women in SSA at the time of study design [28] and a baseline retention in care rate of 48% based on trial data from a study of service integration conducted in the same region in Kenya [29]. We powered our study to be able to detect a 25% absolute increase due to each intervention individually. To achieve 80% power for both outcomes with a conservative (high) intra‐cluster correlation coefficient of 0.12 and an average of 70 women sampled per community, we calculated 20 sites, 5 in each arm with a target sample size of 1336 women (334 women per arm) would be needed. Descriptive analyses summarized characteristics of participants and assessed frequency distributions of variables. Analyses of primary outcomes of maternal ART adherence and maternal retention in care (dichotomous variables) compared proportions between intervention and control groups using cluster adjusted two‐sided chi square tests. Given the clustered study design, generalized estimating equations (GEEs) were used to test for differences of interest in univariable and multivariable models, adjusted for relevant covariates identified as differing across study arms at baseline with p≤0.05, using a logit link. Secondary outcomes, such as maternal viral load suppression (80% of expected intervention dose received) versus low levels of exposure to the interventions, adjusted for gestational age at enrolment to the study. For the PP analyses, a level of completion of 80% of the intervention received was selected a priori as this was considered by the research team to be the minimal adequate dose of the interventions. Although there is no standard recommended cut‐off in the literature for the dose of multi‐session interventions received to be used in PP analyses, “clinical” judgement of an adequate dose is one accepted approach [30]. All analyses were done using Stata 15 Software [31]. All women enrolled in the study provided written informed consent. The study was approved by the Kenya Medical Research Institute, University of Alabama at Birmingham and the University of Colorado, Denver Institutional Review Boards.

The MOTIVATE trial aimed to evaluate the impact of two behavioral interventions on postpartum adherence and retention in women living with HIV (WLWH) in Kenya. The interventions included text messaging and community-based mentor mothers (cMM). The study enrolled 1331 pregnant WLWH from December 2015 to August 2017 in 24 health facilities in southwestern Kenya. The primary outcomes measured were retention in care and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence at 12 months postpartum.

The study found that in intention-to-treat analyses, the relative risk of being retained at 12 months postpartum was not significantly higher in the intervention arms compared to the control arm. However, in per-protocol analyses, the relative risk of 12-month postpartum retention was 24-29% higher for women receiving at least 80% of the expected intervention compared to the control arm. The cMM and text arm had significantly lower rates of loss-to-follow-up (LTFU) compared to the control arm.

It was observed that women who were LTFU were younger, less likely to be married, and more likely to be newly diagnosed with HIV during pregnancy. Self-reported ART adherence did not vary by study arm.

In conclusion, the behavioral interventions using peer support and text messages did not appear to improve 12-month postpartum retention and adherence in intention-to-treat analyses. However, higher levels of exposure to the interventions may be necessary to achieve the desired effects.
AI Innovations Description
The MOTIVATE study was a cluster-randomized trial conducted in Kenya to evaluate the impact of behavioral interventions on postpartum adherence and retention in women living with HIV (WLWH). The study included 1331 pregnant WLWH from 24 health facilities in southwestern Kenya. The facilities were randomized into four study arms: standard care (control), text-messaging only, community-based mentor mothers (cMM) only, or both text-messaging and cMM.

The primary outcomes of the study were retention in care and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence at 12 months postpartum. The results showed that in intention-to-treat analyses, the relative risk of being retained at 12 months postpartum was not significantly higher in the intervention arms compared to the control arm. However, in per-protocol analyses, women who received at least 80% of the expected intervention had a 24-29% higher relative risk of 12-month postpartum retention compared to the control arm.

The text-messaging intervention involved sending tailored messages focused on medication and clinic adherence, as well as promotion of maternal and child healthcare services. The cMM intervention was adapted from the Kenya Mentor Mother Program and involved structured home visits by WLWH who had demonstrated good ART adherence and had disclosed their HIV status.

The study found that the cMM and text arm had significantly lower rates of loss-to-follow-up (LTFU) compared to the control arm. Women who were LTFU were younger, less likely to be married, and more likely to be newly diagnosed with HIV during pregnancy. Self-reported ART adherence did not vary by study arm.

In conclusion, the behavioral interventions using peer support and text messages did not appear to improve 12-month postpartum retention and adherence in intention-to-treat analyses. However, higher levels of exposure to the interventions, with at least 80% of the expected intervention dose received, were associated with improved postpartum retention.
AI Innovations Methodology
The MOTIVATE trial aimed to evaluate the impact of two behavioral interventions on postpartum adherence and retention in women living with HIV (WLWH) in Kenya. The interventions included text messaging and community-based mentor mothers (cMM). The study was conducted in 24 health facilities in southwestern Kenya from December 2015 to August 2017.

The primary outcomes measured were retention in care and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence at 12 months postpartum. The study utilized a cluster-randomized design, with the health facilities being randomized into four study arms: standard care (control), text messaging only, cMM only, and both text messaging and cMM.

The methodology involved enrolling pregnant WLWH who met the inclusion criteria, such as being at least 18 years old, having mobile phone access, and living within the facility catchment area. The interventions were delivered based on the randomized study arm. Text messages were sent weekly from pregnancy through 12 months postpartum, focusing on medication and clinic adherence and promoting maternal and child healthcare services. cMMs, who were WLWH with good ART adherence and disclosure of their HIV status, conducted structured home visits to maximize retention in prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) and other essential health services.

Data were collected through standardized forms and clinic registers, and primary outcome measures were assessed through self-report and medical records. Adherence to ART was classified as good (>95% of pills taken since last clinic visit), fair (85-94%), or poor (

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