4.3 Article

Self-reported Recent PrEP Dosing and Drug Detection in an Open Label PrEP Study

Journal

AIDS AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 20, Issue 7, Pages 1535-1540

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10461-016-1360-7

Keywords

PrEP adherence; Self-report; Drug levels; Open-label; Demonstration project; iPrEx; FTC/TDF

Funding

  1. NIH [A1064002]
  2. FIH.NIH [A1068619]

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Monitoring adherence to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is part of the recommended package for PrEP prescribing, yet ongoing concerns about how to do so confidently are exacerbated by gross discrepancies in reported and actual use in clinical trials. We evaluated concordance between reports of recent PrEP dosing collected via neutral interviewing and drug quantitation in the iPrEx open-label extension, where participants (n = 1172) had the choice to receive or not receive PrEP. Self-report of recent dosing (at least one PrEP dose in the past 3-day) was the most common report (84 % of participants), and among these 83 % did have quantifiable levels of drug. The vast majority of those reporting no doses in the past 3-day (16 % of the sample) did not have quantifiable levels of drug (82 %). Predictors of over-report of dosing included younger age and lower educational attainment. Monitoring recent PrEP use through neutral interviewing may be a productive approach for clinicians to consider in implementation of real-world PrEP. Strategies to capture longer term or prevention-effective PrEP use, particularly for younger cohorts, are needed.

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