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Differences in HIV cure clinical trial preferences of French people living with HIV and physicians in the ANRS-APSEC study: a discrete choice experiment

Authors :
Protiere, Christel
Arnold, Michael
Fiorentino, Marion
Fressard, Lisa
Lelievre, Jean D.
Mimi, Mohamed
Raffi, Francois
Mora, Marion
Meyer, Laurence
Sagaon-Teyssier, Luis
Zucman, David
Preau, Marie
Lambotte, Olivier
Spire, Bruno
Suzan-Monti, Marie
Source :
Journal of the International AIDS Society. February, 2020, Vol. 23 Issue 2, p1D, 9 p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Introduction: Despite the advent of HIV cure-related clinical trials (HCRCT) for people living with HIV (PLWH), the risks and uncertainty involved raise ethical issues. Although research has provided insights into the levers and barriers to PLWH and physicians' participation in these trials, no information exists about stakeholders' preferences for HCRCT attributes, about the different ways PLWH and physicians value future HCRCT, or about how personal characteristics affect these preferences. The results from the present study will inform researchers' decisions about the most suitable HCRCT strategies to implement, and help them ensure ethical recruitment and well-designed informed consent. Methods: Between October 2016 and March 2017, a discrete choice experiment was conducted among 195 virally controlled PLWH and 160 physicians from 24 French HIV centres. Profiles within each group, based on individual characteristics, were obtained using hierarchical clustering. Trade-offs between five HCRCT attributes (trial duration, consultation frequency, moderate (digestive disorders, flu-type syndrome, fatigue) and severe (allergy, infections, risk of cancer) side effects (SE), outcomes) and utilities associated with four HCRCT candidates (latency reactivation, immunotherapy, gene therapy and a combination of atency reactivation and immunotherapy), were estimated using a mixed logit model. Results: Apart from severe SE--the most decisive attribute in both groups--PLWH and physicians made different trade-offs between HCRCT attributes, the latter being more concerned about outcomes, the former about the burden of participation (consultation frequency and moderate SE). These different trades-offs resulted in differences in preferences regarding the four candidate HCRCT. PLWH significantly preferred immunotherapy, whereas physicians preferred immunotherapy and combined therapy. Despite the heterogeneity of characteristics within the PLWH and physician profiles, results show some homogeneity in trade-offs and utilities regarding HCRCT. Conclusions: Severe SE, not outcomes, was the most decisive attribute determining future HCRCT participation. Particular attention should be paid to providing clear information, in particular on severe SE, to potential participants. Immunotherapy would appear to be the best HCRCT candidate for both PLWH and physicians. However, if the risk of cancer could be avoided, gene therapy would become the preferred strategy for the latter and the second choice for the former. Keywords: HIV eradication/remission; therapeutic HIV vaccine trial; social sciences; discrete choice experiment; preferences; ethics; clinical trial design recommendations; mixed logit mode<br />(1) | INTRODUCTION HIV cure research, a desired but risky and 'uncomfortable' innovation [1], raises several ethical questions [2-6]. More specifically, to test the effectiveness of new HIV cure-related clinical [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17582652
Volume :
23
Issue :
2
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of the International AIDS Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.622151213
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25443