What are the key steps to effective delivery of PrEP care?

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Providing pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to people who need it entails at least nine key steps, which can be conceived of as a PrEP continuum of care, according to an article published online ahead of print by Amy Nunn and colleagues in AIDS. This continuum can help define benchmarks by which progress in implementing PrEP in different programmes can be compared.

This is one of several recent articles which have attempted to define a continuum of care for PrEP or other HIV prevention interventions, adapting the concept of the ‘treatment cascade’ or the ‘continuum of care’ that is used in relation to HIV treatment.

The HIV treatment continuum of care has helped identify the sequence of events which are needed for treatment to have its desired effect – diagnosis, linkage to care, retention in care, receiving HIV treatment and adherence to it. Moreover, UNAIDS’ 90-90-90 targets reflect three key points within this continuum of care. The targets have been used to focus attention on improving uptake of key interventions that are essential to the health of people living with HIV.

Glossary

continuum of care

A model that outlines the steps of medical care that people living with HIV go through from initial diagnosis to achieving viral suppression, and shows the proportion of individuals living with HIV who are engaged at each stage. 

retention in care

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

linkage to care

Refers to an individual’s entry into specialist HIV care after being diagnosed with HIV. 

90-90-90 target

A target set by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) for 90% of people with HIV to be diagnosed, 90% of diagnosed people to be taking treatment, and 90% of people on treatment to have an undetectable viral load. 

loss to follow up

In a research study, participants who drop out before the end of the study. In routine clinical care, patients who do not attend medical appointments and who cannot be contacted.

If there were consensus about the key steps in relation to PrEP, this might also help focus attention and improve implementation.

Nunn and colleagues say that their model is based on experience implementing PrEP in Providence, Rhode Island and other sites in the United States. Each of the steps that are included presents opportunities for patients to continue using PrEP or to disengage from care – they are therefore important points of intervention.

The steps move from awareness to accessing healthcare, and then to adherence and retention.

1. Identify individuals at highest risk of HIV.

2. Increase those individuals’ awareness of their risk of HIV.

3. Enhance those individuals’ awareness of PrEP.

4. Facilitate access to PrEP, in other words potential users schedule an appointment with a suitable medical provider and have appropriate health insurance.

5. Link to PrEP care, in other words potential users attend their appointment.

6. Prescribe PrEP to those who meet clinical criteria.

7. Initiate PrEP: users start to take the medications.

8. Adhere to PrEP: users consistently take the medications.

9. Retain individuals in PrEP care.

The authors note that defining who is retained in care is challenging. PrEP is understood to be appropriate for ‘seasons of risk’, so many people will withdraw from PrEP care in a way that is entirely appropriate. Retention should be measured with reference in four distinct groups of people – individuals who need PrEP who are retained in care, individuals who need PrEP who are not retained in care, individuals who no longer need PrEP, and individuals lost to follow-up.

In this publication, the authors don’t propose data sources that could be used to compare different programmes or localities. Just as many countries have difficulty estimating the proportion of people living with HIV who remain undiagnosed (for measuring progress to 90-90-90), having reliable data to estimate the size of the population at highest risk of HIV and the proportion of that group aware of PrEP will be challenging in many settings. Nonetheless, setting targets may spur data collection.

The model builds upon and adds additional stages to a continuum that was published by Colleen Kelley and colleagues in 2015. That was a four-stage continuum (aware of PrEP and willing to use it; have access to healthcare; eligible for PrEP; adhere to PrEP). The new model suggests that the continuum of care is more complex and suggests a series of opportunities for intervention.

However a simpler continuum might be more useful for setting targets and as an advocacy tool. For example, by including access to healthcare as one of the four stages in the continuum, Kelley focuses attention on the way in which exclusion from health insurance restricts the uptake of PrEP in the United States.

And while these models may appear comprehensive, it is notable that they do not fully encompass one of the three key stages of the HIV prevention cascade that were described by James Hargreaves and colleagues in The Lancet HIV last year.  According to Hargreaves, for any HIV prevention product, procedure or behaviour we need to consider supply, demand and adherence. By including awareness, adherence and retention, Nunn’s continuum reflects the latter two.

But it focuses attention on the individual who may take PrEP and can only indirectly measure problems with the supply of PrEP, in other words problems with the health system. The coverage of PrEP could be low because only a few clinical services offer PrEP, they are inappropriate for the people who need it, or physicians have doubts about the merits of PrEP.

The interventions needed to increase the coverage of PrEP might not only be demand-creation or adherence-support, but the creation of more accessible health services, services to help people obtain health insurance, physician education, or the removal of legal barriers to providing PrEP to people under the age of 18.

References

Nunn A et al. Defining the HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Care Continuum. AIDS, online ahead of print, 2017.

Kelley C et al. Applying a PrEP Continuum of Care for Men Who Have Sex With Men in Atlanta, Georgia. Clinical Infectious Diseases 61:1590-1597, 2015.

Hargreaves J et al. The HIV prevention cascade: integrating theories of epidemiological, behavioural, and social science into programme design and monitoring. The Lancet HIV 3: e318-22, 2016.