Cargando…

'Well, It's the Risk of the Unknown… Right?': A Qualitative Study of Perceived Risks and Benefits of HIV Cure Research in the United States

INTRODUCTION: Biomedical research towards an HIV cure is advancing in the United States and elsewhere, yet little is known about perceptions of risks and benefits among potential study participants and other stakeholders. We conducted a qualitative study to explore perceived risks and benefits of in...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dubé, Karine, Taylor, Jeff, Sylla, Laurie, Evans, David, Dee, Lynda, Burton, Alasdair, Willenberg, Loreen, Rennie, Stuart, Skinner, Asheley, Tucker, Joseph D., Weiner, Bryan J., Greene, Sandra B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5266311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28122027
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170112
_version_ 1782500443993145344
author Dubé, Karine
Taylor, Jeff
Sylla, Laurie
Evans, David
Dee, Lynda
Burton, Alasdair
Willenberg, Loreen
Rennie, Stuart
Skinner, Asheley
Tucker, Joseph D.
Weiner, Bryan J.
Greene, Sandra B.
author_facet Dubé, Karine
Taylor, Jeff
Sylla, Laurie
Evans, David
Dee, Lynda
Burton, Alasdair
Willenberg, Loreen
Rennie, Stuart
Skinner, Asheley
Tucker, Joseph D.
Weiner, Bryan J.
Greene, Sandra B.
author_sort Dubé, Karine
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Biomedical research towards an HIV cure is advancing in the United States and elsewhere, yet little is known about perceptions of risks and benefits among potential study participants and other stakeholders. We conducted a qualitative study to explore perceived risks and benefits of investigational HIV cure research among people living with HIV (PLWHIV), biomedical HIV cure researchers, policy-makers and bioethicists. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative research study using in-depth interviews with a purposive sample of PLWHIV, biomedical HIV cure researchers, policy-makers and bioethicists in 2015–2016. We analysed interview transcripts using thematic analysis anchored in grounded theory. RESULTS: We conducted and analyzed 36 key informant interviews. Qualitative analysis revealed four main findings. 1) Potential HIV cure study volunteers noted needing more information and education about the potential risks of HIV cure research. 2) Biomedical HIV cure researchers, policy-makers and bioethicists showed less awareness of social and financial risks of HIV cure research than PLWHIV. 3) Most respondents across the different categories of informants identified some risks that were too great to be acceptable in HIV cure research, although a subset of PLWHIV did not place an upper limit on acceptable risk. 4) PLWHIV showed a better awareness of potential psychological benefits of participating in HIV cure research than other groups of stakeholders. CONCLUSION: Our research suggests that PLWHIV have a variable understanding of the individual risks, sometimes substantial, associated with participating in biomedical HIV cure research studies. Community engagement and increased research literacy may help improve community understanding. Intensive informed consent procedures will be necessary for ethical study implementation. The current state of HIV cure research offers greater potential benefits to society than to participants. There is likely to be disagreement among regulators, researchers, clinicians, and potential participants about what constitutes acceptable risk for HIV cure studies.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5266311
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-52663112017-02-17 'Well, It's the Risk of the Unknown… Right?': A Qualitative Study of Perceived Risks and Benefits of HIV Cure Research in the United States Dubé, Karine Taylor, Jeff Sylla, Laurie Evans, David Dee, Lynda Burton, Alasdair Willenberg, Loreen Rennie, Stuart Skinner, Asheley Tucker, Joseph D. Weiner, Bryan J. Greene, Sandra B. PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Biomedical research towards an HIV cure is advancing in the United States and elsewhere, yet little is known about perceptions of risks and benefits among potential study participants and other stakeholders. We conducted a qualitative study to explore perceived risks and benefits of investigational HIV cure research among people living with HIV (PLWHIV), biomedical HIV cure researchers, policy-makers and bioethicists. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative research study using in-depth interviews with a purposive sample of PLWHIV, biomedical HIV cure researchers, policy-makers and bioethicists in 2015–2016. We analysed interview transcripts using thematic analysis anchored in grounded theory. RESULTS: We conducted and analyzed 36 key informant interviews. Qualitative analysis revealed four main findings. 1) Potential HIV cure study volunteers noted needing more information and education about the potential risks of HIV cure research. 2) Biomedical HIV cure researchers, policy-makers and bioethicists showed less awareness of social and financial risks of HIV cure research than PLWHIV. 3) Most respondents across the different categories of informants identified some risks that were too great to be acceptable in HIV cure research, although a subset of PLWHIV did not place an upper limit on acceptable risk. 4) PLWHIV showed a better awareness of potential psychological benefits of participating in HIV cure research than other groups of stakeholders. CONCLUSION: Our research suggests that PLWHIV have a variable understanding of the individual risks, sometimes substantial, associated with participating in biomedical HIV cure research studies. Community engagement and increased research literacy may help improve community understanding. Intensive informed consent procedures will be necessary for ethical study implementation. The current state of HIV cure research offers greater potential benefits to society than to participants. There is likely to be disagreement among regulators, researchers, clinicians, and potential participants about what constitutes acceptable risk for HIV cure studies. Public Library of Science 2017-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC5266311/ /pubmed/28122027 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170112 Text en © 2017 Dubé et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dubé, Karine
Taylor, Jeff
Sylla, Laurie
Evans, David
Dee, Lynda
Burton, Alasdair
Willenberg, Loreen
Rennie, Stuart
Skinner, Asheley
Tucker, Joseph D.
Weiner, Bryan J.
Greene, Sandra B.
'Well, It's the Risk of the Unknown… Right?': A Qualitative Study of Perceived Risks and Benefits of HIV Cure Research in the United States
title 'Well, It's the Risk of the Unknown… Right?': A Qualitative Study of Perceived Risks and Benefits of HIV Cure Research in the United States
title_full 'Well, It's the Risk of the Unknown… Right?': A Qualitative Study of Perceived Risks and Benefits of HIV Cure Research in the United States
title_fullStr 'Well, It's the Risk of the Unknown… Right?': A Qualitative Study of Perceived Risks and Benefits of HIV Cure Research in the United States
title_full_unstemmed 'Well, It's the Risk of the Unknown… Right?': A Qualitative Study of Perceived Risks and Benefits of HIV Cure Research in the United States
title_short 'Well, It's the Risk of the Unknown… Right?': A Qualitative Study of Perceived Risks and Benefits of HIV Cure Research in the United States
title_sort 'well, it's the risk of the unknown… right?': a qualitative study of perceived risks and benefits of hiv cure research in the united states
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5266311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28122027
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170112
work_keys_str_mv AT dubekarine wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT taylorjeff wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT syllalaurie wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT evansdavid wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT deelynda wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT burtonalasdair wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT willenbergloreen wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT renniestuart wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT skinnerasheley wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT tuckerjosephd wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT weinerbryanj wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates
AT greenesandrab wellitstheriskoftheunknownrightaqualitativestudyofperceivedrisksandbenefitsofhivcureresearchintheunitedstates