Impact of early initiation versus national standard of care of antiretroviral therapy in Swaziland’s public sector health system : study protocol for a stepped-wedge randomized trial
Date
2017
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC (part of Springer Nature)
Abstract
Background: There is robust clinical evidence to support offering early access to antiretroviral treatment (ART) to
all HIV-positive individuals, irrespective of disease stage, to both improve patient health outcomes and reduce HIV
incidence. However, as the global treatment guidelines shift to meet this evidence, it is still largely unknown if early
access to ART for all (also referred to as “treatment as prevention” or “universal test and treat”) is a feasible intervention in
the resource-limited countries where this approach could have the biggest impact on the course of the HIV epidemics.
The MaxART Early Access to ART for All (EAAA) implementation study was designed to determine the feasibility,
acceptability, clinical outcomes, affordability, and scalability of offering early antiretroviral treatment to all HIV-positive
individuals in Swaziland’s public sector health system.
Methods: This is a three-year stepped-wedge randomized design with open enrollment for all adults aged 18 years and
older across 14 government-managed health facilities in Swaziland’s Hhohho Region. Primary endpoints are retention and
viral suppression. Secondary endpoints include ART initiation, adherence, drug resistance, tuberculosis, HIV disease
progression, patient satisfaction, and cost per patient per year.
Sites are grouped to transition two at a time from the control (standard of care) to intervention (EAAA) stage at each
four-month step. This design will result in approximately one half of the total observation time to accrue in the
intervention arm and the other half in the control arm. Our estimated enrolment number, which is supported by
conservative power calculations, is 4501 patients over the course of the 36-month study period.
A multidisciplinary, mixed-methods approach will be adopted to supplement the randomized controlled trial and meet
the study aims. Additional study components include implementation science, social science, economic evaluation,
and predictive HIV incidence modeling.
Discussion: A stepped-wedge randomized design is a causally strong and robust approach to determine if providing
antiretroviral treatment for all HIV-positive individuals is a feasible intervention in a resource-limited, public sector
health system. We expect our study results to contribute to health policy decisions related to the HIV response in
Swaziland and other countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
Description
CITATION: Walsh, F. J., et al. 2017. Impact of early initiation versus national standard of care of antiretroviral therapy in Swaziland’s public sector health system : study protocol for a stepped-wedge randomized trial. Trials, 18:383, doi:10.1186/s13063-017-2128-8.
The original publication is available at https://trialsjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13063-017-2128-8
The original publication is available at https://trialsjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13063-017-2128-8
Keywords
Antiretroviral agents -- Administration -- Swaziland, Clinical trials, HIV positive persons -- Treatment, HIV infections -- Prevention -- Swaziland
Citation
Walsh, F. J., et al. 2017. Impact of early initiation versus national standard of care of antiretroviral therapy in Swaziland’s public sector health system : study protocol for a stepped-wedge randomized trial. Trials, 18:383, doi:10.1186/s13063-017-2128-8