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Willingness to participate and take risks in HIV cure research: survey results from 400 people living with HIV in the US

INTRODUCTION: Participation in early-phase HIV cure studies includes clinical risks with little to no likelihood of clinical benefit. Examining the willingness of people living with HIV to participate is important to guide study design and informed consent. Our study examined the overall willingness...

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Autores principales: Dubé, Karine, Evans, David, Sylla, Laurie, Taylor, Jeff, Weiner, Bryan J, Skinner, Asheley, Thirumurthy, Harsha, Tucker, Joseph D, Rennie, Stuart, Greene, Sandra B
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Mediscript Ltd 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5337420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28275457
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author Dubé, Karine
Evans, David
Sylla, Laurie
Taylor, Jeff
Weiner, Bryan J
Skinner, Asheley
Thirumurthy, Harsha
Tucker, Joseph D
Rennie, Stuart
Greene, Sandra B
author_facet Dubé, Karine
Evans, David
Sylla, Laurie
Taylor, Jeff
Weiner, Bryan J
Skinner, Asheley
Thirumurthy, Harsha
Tucker, Joseph D
Rennie, Stuart
Greene, Sandra B
author_sort Dubé, Karine
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Participation in early-phase HIV cure studies includes clinical risks with little to no likelihood of clinical benefit. Examining the willingness of people living with HIV to participate is important to guide study design and informed consent. Our study examined the overall willingness of people living with HIV to participate in HIV cure research in the US, focusing on perceived risks and benefits of participation. METHODS: We undertook an online survey of adults living with HIV in the US. Survey questions were developed based on previous research and a scoping review of the literature. We quantitatively assessed individuals’ perceived risks and benefits of HIV cure-related research and respondents’ willingness to participate in different modalities of HIV cure studies. RESULTS: We recruited 409 study participants of whom 400 were eligible for the study and were included in the analysis (nine were not eligible due to self-declared HIV-negative status). We found >50% willingness to participate in 14 different types of HIV cure studies. Perceived clinical benefits and social benefits were important motivators, while personal clinical risks appeared to deter potential participation. Roughly two-thirds of survey respondents (68%) indicated that they were somewhat willing to stop treatment as part of HIV cure research. In the bivariate models, females, African Americans/blacks, Hispanics, individuals in the lowest income bracket, people living with HIV for longer periods of their lives, and people who were self-perceived ‘very healthy’ were less willing to participate in certain types of HIV cure studies than others. Multivariate results showed the perceived benefits (adjusted odds ratios >1) and perceived risks (adjusted odds ratios <1) acted as potential motivators and deterrents to participation, respectively. CONCLUSION: Our study is the first attempt to quantify potential motivators and deterrents of participation in HIV cure research in the US using perceived risks and benefits. The results offer guidance to HIV cure researchers and developers of interventions about the beneficial and detrimental characteristics of HIV cure strategies that are most meaningful to people living with HIV. The study also highlights new potential lines of inquiry for further social science and ethics research.
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spelling pubmed-53374202017-03-08 Willingness to participate and take risks in HIV cure research: survey results from 400 people living with HIV in the US Dubé, Karine Evans, David Sylla, Laurie Taylor, Jeff Weiner, Bryan J Skinner, Asheley Thirumurthy, Harsha Tucker, Joseph D Rennie, Stuart Greene, Sandra B J Virus Erad Original Research INTRODUCTION: Participation in early-phase HIV cure studies includes clinical risks with little to no likelihood of clinical benefit. Examining the willingness of people living with HIV to participate is important to guide study design and informed consent. Our study examined the overall willingness of people living with HIV to participate in HIV cure research in the US, focusing on perceived risks and benefits of participation. METHODS: We undertook an online survey of adults living with HIV in the US. Survey questions were developed based on previous research and a scoping review of the literature. We quantitatively assessed individuals’ perceived risks and benefits of HIV cure-related research and respondents’ willingness to participate in different modalities of HIV cure studies. RESULTS: We recruited 409 study participants of whom 400 were eligible for the study and were included in the analysis (nine were not eligible due to self-declared HIV-negative status). We found >50% willingness to participate in 14 different types of HIV cure studies. Perceived clinical benefits and social benefits were important motivators, while personal clinical risks appeared to deter potential participation. Roughly two-thirds of survey respondents (68%) indicated that they were somewhat willing to stop treatment as part of HIV cure research. In the bivariate models, females, African Americans/blacks, Hispanics, individuals in the lowest income bracket, people living with HIV for longer periods of their lives, and people who were self-perceived ‘very healthy’ were less willing to participate in certain types of HIV cure studies than others. Multivariate results showed the perceived benefits (adjusted odds ratios >1) and perceived risks (adjusted odds ratios <1) acted as potential motivators and deterrents to participation, respectively. CONCLUSION: Our study is the first attempt to quantify potential motivators and deterrents of participation in HIV cure research in the US using perceived risks and benefits. The results offer guidance to HIV cure researchers and developers of interventions about the beneficial and detrimental characteristics of HIV cure strategies that are most meaningful to people living with HIV. The study also highlights new potential lines of inquiry for further social science and ethics research. Mediscript Ltd 2017-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5337420/ /pubmed/28275457 Text en © 2017 The Authors. Journal of Virus Eradication published by Mediscript Ltd http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an open access article published under the terms of a Creative Commons License.
spellingShingle Original Research
Dubé, Karine
Evans, David
Sylla, Laurie
Taylor, Jeff
Weiner, Bryan J
Skinner, Asheley
Thirumurthy, Harsha
Tucker, Joseph D
Rennie, Stuart
Greene, Sandra B
Willingness to participate and take risks in HIV cure research: survey results from 400 people living with HIV in the US
title Willingness to participate and take risks in HIV cure research: survey results from 400 people living with HIV in the US
title_full Willingness to participate and take risks in HIV cure research: survey results from 400 people living with HIV in the US
title_fullStr Willingness to participate and take risks in HIV cure research: survey results from 400 people living with HIV in the US
title_full_unstemmed Willingness to participate and take risks in HIV cure research: survey results from 400 people living with HIV in the US
title_short Willingness to participate and take risks in HIV cure research: survey results from 400 people living with HIV in the US
title_sort willingness to participate and take risks in hiv cure research: survey results from 400 people living with hiv in the us
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5337420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28275457
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