Can self-testing engage 'hard-to-reach' men with HIV testing?

Helen Ayles presenting at IAS 2017. Photo by Roger Pebody, aidsmap.com

Adding HIV self-testing as an additional option to a door-to-door programme offering HIV testing in Zambia boosted the uptake of HIV testing among men, younger adults and those who had previously refused HIV testing, Helen Ayles of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine told the 9th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Science (IAS 2017) in Paris today. It appears that HIV self-testing may have a particular impact on testing rates in men and could contribute to meeting the 90-90-90 targets in men.

Ayles emphasised that the effect was seen in communities which had already been exposed to three years of intensive efforts to offer HIV testing to all. People who had not already been tested must be considered the ‘hardest to reach’ and the self-testing intervention was notable for having an impact with these individuals.

The study presented was a substudy of PopART (also known as HPTN 071), a large community-randomised trial being carried out in high-prevalence communities in Zambia and South Africa. PopART is aiming to implement an approach of universal HIV testing and universal access to immediate HIV treatment for those who need it, in order to reduce new HIV infections.

Glossary

self-testing

In HIV testing, when the person testing collects their own sample and performs the whole test themselves, including reading and interpreting the result. 

control group

A group of participants in a trial who receive standard treatment, or no treatment at all, rather than the experimental treatment which is being tested. Also known as a control arm.

reactive

Because of the possibility that a positive result from a single HIV test is, in fact, a false positive, the result is described as 'reactive' rather than 'positive'. If the result is reactive, this indicates that the test has reacted to something in the blood and needs to be investigated with follow-up tests.

transmission cluster

By comparing the genetic sequence of the virus in different individuals, scientists can identify viruses that are closely related. A transmission cluster is a group of people who have similar strains of the virus, which suggests (but does not prove) HIV transmission between those individuals.

retention in care

A patient’s regular and ongoing engagement with medical care at a health care facility. 

The main approach to HIV testing used in PopART is home based HIV testing, in which lay counsellors (known in the study as Community HIV Care Providers or CHiPs) systematically visit all households in a geographical area and offer HIV testing and counselling. While this approach is feasible and acceptable, it is challenging to achieve very high levels of uptake among men, younger people and mobile individuals (for example, people travelling for work).

By the end of the second year of PopART, the target of having tested 90% of people had been achieved for women, in almost all age groups over 20 years (but not for younger women). But uptake was much lower in men – in most age groups, between 70 and 85% had tested, with uptake only surpassing 90% in those over the age of 55.

Supplementary approaches appear to be necessary.

A substudy of PopART therefore aimed to evaluate whether offering self-testing as an additional option would increase the uptake of HIV testing. This was a cluster-randomised trial in 66 zones in four communities in Zambia. In the 33 intervention zones, household members were offered two options for HIV testing – rapid testing by the lay counsellor or self-testing. In the 33 zones in the control group, only rapid testing by the lay counsellor was offered.

The standard PopART intervention, offered in the control group, involves lay counsellors making door-to-door visits to households and offering rapid HIV testing, using a finger prick blood test. The lay counsellors also test for sexually transmitted infections and tuberculosis, as well as promoting and making referrals to treatment and male circumcision services. They also provide support for retention in care and adherence to treatment.

In the arm of the study in which self-testing was an option, it was chosen by 55% of those who took a test. The vast majority (88%) of those taking a self-test chose to have the lay counsellor present during the test, described as ‘supervised’ self-testing by the researchers. The health worker could help with problems users faced in operating the test or in interpreting the result. Helen Ayles said that she would expect more self-testing to be unsupervised in the future, as people become more familiar with the process.

Another testing modality was ‘secondary distribution’ — when a household member was absent, a self-testing kit could be left with their partner for them to use later.

By the end of a three-month period earlier this year, 60.4% of adult men in the intervention arm knew their HIV status, compared to 55.1% in the control arm. A similar effect was not seen in women.

The effect of providing self-testing was also seen in people of both genders aged 16 to 29 (73.5% in the intervention arm and 70.2% in the control arm knew their status).

There was also strong evidence that providing self-testing improved knowledge of status in individuals who were locally resident during earlier phases of PopART but had previously turned down the offer of testing by the PopART lay counsellors. Among these individuals, 29.7% knew their status in the intervention arm, compared to 20.6% in the control arm.

In the control arm, 2.6% of people testing had reactive results. The figure was similar for people tested by the lay counsellor in the intervention arm (2.5%), people using self-tests with supervision (2.9%) and people using self-tests without supervision (3.5%).

However, it was noticeable that in people tested following secondary distribution (i.e. partners who were absent when the lay counsellor visited), the numbers with reactive results were higher. In 81 people who discussed their results with the lay counsellor, 9.9% had a reactive result and in 242 people whose results were communicated by the partner to the lay counsellor, 5.4% had a reactive result. Secondary distribution may be particularly helpful in reducing undiagnosed infection. In many cases, it led to the couple testing together.

Qualitative findings from in-depth interviews and focus groups suggested that self-testing was acceptable for people who were worried about waiting times and stigma in clinics; self-testing had advantages in terms of confidentiality, control and convenience; and that people felt empowered by knowing how to test themselves. Self-testing was particularly acceptable for busy and mobile people, married men, those living with a partner, people of higher social classes, those in formal employment and members of key populations (such as sex workers).

Helen Ayles said that HIV self testing is a solution for engaging ‘hard-to-reach’ groups such as working men and mobile populations with HIV testing. She said that even if the increase in testing uptake may be modest (a few percentage points), this should be considered in the context of a population that has already been given multiple opportunities to test.

Secondary distribution

A number of studies are examining secondary distribution approaches, often asking women to offer self-testing kits to their male partners. For example, Rhoda Wanyenze reported on a cluster-randomised controlled trial in Uganda, in which women attending antenatal services were given kits to pass on to their partners and other family members. They were given education on how to introduce the self-testing kit, how to use it, confirmatory testing and other aspects of follow-on support.

In the intervention arm, 74% of male partners were tested, compared to 36% of male partners in the control arm. The researchers noted that the impact was greatest when the woman had secondary or vocational education, was self-employed or was over the age of 30. This suggests that more empowered women had greater success in introducing the test than less empowered women.

Qualitative findings showed that many women had concerns about how they could deliver the kits to their partners. While half delivered the kits on the same day, many others waited until they felt their partner was in a sufficiently good mood. Many women suggested that it was a health worker, and not the woman herself, who wanted the man to test. Some lied about the purpose of the kit, suggesting it would detect syphilis or cancer (in at least one case, this created a dilemma when the man got a reactive result). Nonetheless, a number of women reported positive experiences after offering the test, including the couple testing together and learning each other’s HIV status, improved communication and more support for HIV-positive partners.

An alternative secondary distribution would be to ask men to distribute self-testing kits to their friends and peers. Mastula Nanfuka of The AIDS Support Organisation (TASO) in Uganda argued that woman-to-man distribution may have limited impact due to safety concerns and power dynamics. He conducted a pilot trial distributing self-test kits through peer networks of fishermen in Bulisa, Uganda. Staff recruited 19 ‘seeds’ who were given training on how to self-test and how to recruit peers. 

The 19 seeds offered self-testing kits to 115 men, 95 of whom accepted the offer. No peers reported being coerced to test. Many of the peers recruited had never been tested (26%) or had last tested more than a year ago (44%).

Four men were HIV positive, including three men who were diagnosed for the first time. There was one new HIV diagnosis per 6.3 seeds.

References

Ayles H et al. Increasing knowledge of HIV status among men: a cluster-randomised trial of community-based distribution of oral HIV self-test kits nested in four HPTN 071 communities in Zambia. 9th IAS Conference on HIV Science, Paris, abstract TUAC0406LB, July 2017.

View the abstract on the conference website.

Download the presentation slides from the conference website.

Watch the webcast of this session on YouTube.

Wanyenze RK et al. HIV Self-testing for Partners of Women Attending Antenatal Care in Central Uganda: Uptake and Linkage To Care. 9th IAS Conference on HIV Science, Paris, abstract MOSA1204, July 2017.

View the details of this session on the conference website.

Nanfuka M et al. Accelerating progress towards the first 90 among men: a trial of the peer-based distribution of HIV self-test kits in Bulisa, Uganda. 9th IAS Conference on HIV Science, Paris, abstract WEPDD0106LB, July 2017.

View the abstract on the conference website.