Published November 13, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

An instant messaging mobile phone application for promoting HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis uptake among Chinese gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men: A mixed methods feasibility and piloting randomized controlled trial study

  • 1. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • 2. Wuhan Tongxing LGBTQ Center
  • 3. Qingdao Eighth People's Hospital
  • 4. Xi'an Polytechnic University
  • 5. Beijing Naomi Media Company
  • 6. University of Chicago
  • 7. Guangzhou Number Eight People's Hospital

Description

Background: Mobile health (mHealth) is a promising intervention mode for HIV prevention, but little is known about its feasibility and effects in promoting pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) uptake among Chinese gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM).

Methods: We evaluated an instant messaging application using a WeChat-based mini-app to promote PrEP uptake among GBMSM via a mixed-methods design that includes a 12-week, two-arm randomized controlled pilot trial and in-depth progress interviews in Guangzhou, China. Primary outcomes include the number of PrEP initiations, individual-level psychosocial variables related to PrEP initiation, and usability of the PrEP mini-app.

Results: Between November 2020 and April 2021, 70 GBMSM were successfully enrolled and randomized into two arms at 2:1 ratio (46 to the intervention arm, 24 to the control arm). By the end of 12-week follow-up, 22 (31.4%) participants completed the initial consultation and lab tests for PrEP, and 13 (18.6%) filled their initial PrEP prescription. We observed modest but non-significant improvements in participants' intention to use PrEP, actual PrEP initiation, PrEP-related self-efficacy, stigma, and attitudes over 12 weeks when comparing the mini-app and the control arms. Qualitative interviews revealed the key barriers to PrEP uptake include anticipated stigma and discrimination in clinical settings, burden of PrEP care, and limited operating hours of the PrEP clinic. In-person clinic navigation support was highly valued.

Conclusions: This pilot trial of a mobile phone-based PrEP mini-app demonstrated feasibility and identified limitations in facilitating PrEP uptake among Chinese GBMSM. Future improvements may include diversifying the content presentation in engaging media formats, adding user engagement features, and providing off-line in-clinic navigation support during initial PrEP visit. More efforts are needed to understand optimal strategies to identify and implement alternative PrEP provision models especially in highly stigmatized settings with diverse needs.

Trial registration: The study was prospectively registered on clinicaltrials.gov (NCT04426656) on 11 June, 2020.

Data availability

We cannot share the study data to researchers outside of the research team without participants’ written permission, as it contains sensitive patient information (e.g., HIV status, medical prescription, etc). This was explained explicitly in the participants informed consent form. Any request for the data should be addressed to the corresponding author Dr. Joseph D. Tucker or by email to jdtucker@med.unc.edu; or the UNC Institutional Review Board at +001-919-966-3113 or by email to IRB_subjects@unc.edu; or contact the Guangzhou Eighth People’s Hospital Institutional Review Board at +86-020-83838688.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0285036
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9693

Funding

National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases
R01-AI114310-S1
National Institute of Mental Health
R34119963
National Natural Science Foundation of China
81903371
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
University of Tokyo

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine