Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Gel or Suppositories? Results of a Rectal Microbicide Formulation Preference Trial Alex Carballo-Diéguez 1, Curtis Dolezal 1, Jose A. Bauermeister 1, Ana.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Gel or Suppositories? Results of a Rectal Microbicide Formulation Preference Trial Alex Carballo-Diéguez 1, Curtis Dolezal 1, Jose A. Bauermeister 1, Ana."— Presentation transcript:

1 Gel or Suppositories? Results of a Rectal Microbicide Formulation Preference Trial Alex Carballo-Diéguez 1, Curtis Dolezal 1, Jose A. Bauermeister 1, Ana Ventuneac 1, William O’Brien 2, Kenneth Mayer 2,3 1.HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies at New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University, New York, NY, USA 2.Fenway Institute, Fenway Community Health, Boston, MA, USA 3.Miriam Hospital/Brown University, Providence, RI, USA HIV CENTER for Clinical and Behavioral Studies at the New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University This research is supported by a grant from NICHD (R01 046060).

2 Acceptability Microbicides need to be not only efficacious against HIV, but, equally important, products that people are willing and able to use Placebo trials allow forecasts of the acceptability of different formulations

3 Formulation Preference Trial To compare the relative acceptability of: Gel (FemGlide) Dosage: 35 mL Accordion-shaped enema bottle Suppository (Rectal Rocket) Dosage: 8 g 2.5 inches in length

4 Study Implementation Recruitment:  The Fenway Community Health – Boston, MA  Between May 2005 - April 2007 Eligibility Criteria:  18 years of age or older;  HIV-negative by self-report;  Knowledgeable about HIV-transmission risk;  Reported having had unprotected RAI in the prior year and rated this behavior as involving some risk of HIV transmission to himself; and  Reported having had a male partner with whom he engaged in RAI at least once every two weeks.

5 Procedures Participants were sequentially randomized to Group A (gel) or Group B (suppository) Inserted the product at home on 3 separate occasions up to 2 hours prior to RAI Returned to the clinic to complete an acceptability assessment Received the second product (Group A, suppository; Group B, gel) Used the product 3 times Returned to the clinic to complete an acceptability and preference assessment

6 Baseline  Demographics  Sexual behavior in previous two months  Intentions to use a rectal microbicide Follow up  Acceptability ratings: Product properties Process of applying products For those reporting problems (leakage, etc.), how much they were bothered by each problem Sexual satisfaction with product use  Product preference  Product recommendations Measures

7 Study Sample 41 years of age (18-60) Majority had high school education or higher 62% were employed $20,001-$40,000 average income 65% identified as White or European American 75% identified as gay Mean number of male partners in prior 2 months: 4.40 Mean of number of RAI occasions: 9.05 (slightly more than half were unprotected)

8 Disliked very much Liked very much Gel Supp COLORSMELLCONSISTENCY

9 Liked very much Disliked very much Gel Supp Gel Supp Gel Supp Product Application Feeling Inside Feeling after 30 min

10 Not at all Very much Leakage Soiling Bloating Gassiness Cramps Bowel Diarrhea Pain/Trauma Movement ▲ Supp o Gel

11 Liked very much Disliked very much ▲ Supp o Gel Feeling With Condoms Without Condoms Partner’s sexual satisfaction Overall partner preference With condoms Without condoms Partner’s sexual satisfaction Sexual Satisfaction Overall partner preference

12 N = 55 N = 22

13 Extremely likely Extremely unlikely Likely to use similar product Likely to use when no condoms Gel Supp Gel Supp

14 Gel was preferred over the suppository ■ Physical properties (color, smell, consistency) ■ Ease of application ■ Feeling inside rectum immediately and after 30 min ■ Less bothersome problems (leakage, soiling, bloating, gassiness, cramps, diarrhea) ■ Feeling of product during sex ■ Sexual satisfaction w/ product, w/ and w/o condoms ■ Perceived partner sexual satisfaction ■ Overall partner acceptability

15 However… ■ Smaller, more compact products would be preferred ■ Participants did not want to have to wait for the product to become “activated” ■ Cost should be equal or only slightly more than a condom ■ Intentionality to use was higher for gel vs. suppository prior to and after the trial

16 Limitations Smaller suppositories or suppositories with different characteristics (e.g., solubility, mode of application) may result in different acceptability ratings Neither the gel nor the suppository carried an active ingredient Small sample size

17 Thank you! Alex Carballo-Diéguez, Ph.D. ac72@columbia.edu


Download ppt "Gel or Suppositories? Results of a Rectal Microbicide Formulation Preference Trial Alex Carballo-Diéguez 1, Curtis Dolezal 1, Jose A. Bauermeister 1, Ana."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google