Browsing by Author "Jing Wang"
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Item Assessing risk for HIV infection among adolescent girls in SouthAfrica: an evaluation of the VOICE risk score (HPTN 068)(2019-07) Danielle Giovenco; Audrey Pettifor; Catherine MacPhail; Kathleen Kahn; Ryan Wagner; Estelle Piwowar-Manning; Jing Wang; James P HughesAbstractIntroduction:To maximize impact and minimize costs, antiretroviral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) interventions should beoffered to those at highest risk for HIV infection. The risk score derived from the VOICE trial is one tool currently being uti-lized to determine eligibility in adolescent PrEP trials in sub-Saharan Africa. This study is aimed at evaluating the utility of therisk score in predicting HIV incidence among a cohort of adolescent girls in rural South Africa.Methods:We utilized data from HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) 068, a phase III randomized controlled trial con-ducted in rural Mpumalanga province, South Africa. School-attending young women aged 13 to 20 years were enrolled intothe trial from 2011 to 2012 and followed for up to three years. A risk score based on individual-level risk factors measuredat enrolment was calculated for HPTN 068 participants who completed a one-year follow-up visit and were HIV seronegativeat enrolment. Possible scores ranged from 0 to 10. A proportional hazards model was then used to determine if risk score atenrolment was predictive of incident HIV infection at follow-up and an area under the curve analysis was used to examine thepredictive ability of the score.Results and Discussion:The risk score had limited variability in the HPTN 068 sample. Scores≥5 identified 85% of incidentinfections from 94% of the sample, compared to the VOICE sample in which scores≥5 identified 91% of incident infectionsfrom only 64% of participants. The risk score did not predict HIV incidence after one year of follow-up (hazardratio=1.029; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.704, 1.503,p=.884) and showed poor predictive ability (area under thecurve=0.55; 95% CI: 0.44, 0.65). Certain individual risk factors that comprise the risk score may be context specific or notrelevant for adolescent populations. Additional factors should be considered when assessing risk for the purposes of deter-mining PrEP eligibility.Conclusions:The VOICE risk score demonstrated low utility to predict HIV incidence in the HPTN 068 sample. Findings high-light the need for an age and developmentally appropriate tool for assessing risk for HIV infection among adolescents. Use ofthe VOICE risk score for determining PrEP eligibility in younger populations should be carefully considered.Item Cash transfers for HIV prevention: what do young women spend it on? Mixed methods findings from HPTN 068(2018) Catherine MacPhail; Nomhle Khoza; Amanda Selin; Aimée Julien; Rhian Twine; Ryan G. Wagner; Xavier Goméz-Olivé; Kathy Kahn; Jing Wang; Audrey PettiforBackground Social grants have been found to have an impact on health and wellbeing in multiple settings. Who receives the grant, however, has been the subject of discussion with regards to how the money is spent and who benefits from the grant. Methods Using survey data from 1214 young women who were in the intervention arm and completed at least one annual visit in the HPTN 068 trial, and qualitative interview data from a subset of 38 participants, we examined spending of a cash transfer provided to young women conditioned on school attendance. Results We found that spending was largely determined and controlled by young women themselves and that the cash transfer was predominately spent on toiletries, clothing and school supplies. In interview data, young women discussed the significant role of cash transfers for adolescent identity, specifically with regard to independence from family and status within the peer network. There were almost no negative consequences from receiving the cash transfer. Conclusions We established that providing adolescents access to cash was not reported to be associated with social harms or negative consequences. Rather, spending of the cash facilitated appropriate adolescent developmental behaviors. The findings are encouraging at a time in which there is global interest in addressing the structural drivers of HIV risk, such as poverty, for young women.Item HIV-1 diversity among young women in rural South Africa: HPTN 068(2018-07-05) Mariya V. Sivay; Sarah E. Hudelson; Jing Wang; Yaw Agyei; Erica L. Hamilton; Amanda Selin; Ann Dennis; Kathleen Kahn; F. Xavier Gomez-Olive; Catherine MacPhail; James P. Hughes; Audrey Pettifor; Susan H. Eshleman; Mary Kathryn GrabowskiBackground South Africa has one of the highest rates of HIV-1 (HIV) infection world-wide, with the highest rates among young women. We analyzed the molecular epidemiology and evolutionary history of HIV in young women attending high school in rural South Africa. Methods Samples were obtained from the HPTN 068 randomized controlled trial, which evaluated the effect of cash transfers for school attendance on HIV incidence in women aged 13–20 years (Mpumalanga province, 2011–2015). Plasma samples from HIV-infected participants were analyzed using the ViroSeq HIV-1 Genotyping assay. Phylogenetic analysis was performed using 200 pol gene study sequences and 2,294 subtype C reference sequences from South Africa. Transmission clusters were identified using Cluster Picker and HIV-TRACE, and were characterized using demographic and other epidemiological data. Phylodynamic analyses were performed using the BEAST software. Results The study enrolled 2,533 young women who were followed through their expected high school graduation date (main study); some participants had a post-study assessment (follow-up study). Two-hundred-twelve of 2,533 enrolled young women had HIV infection. HIV pol sequences were obtained for 94% (n = 201/212) of the HIV-infected participants. All but one of the sequences were HIV-1 subtype C; the non-C subtype sequence was excluded from further analysis. Median pairwise genetic distance between the subtype C sequences was 6.4% (IQR: 5.6–7.2). Overall, 26% of study sequences fell into 21 phylogenetic clusters with 2–6 women per cluster. Thirteen (62%) clusters included women who were HIV-infected at enrollment. Clustering was not associated with study arm, demographic or other epidemiological factors. The estimated date of origin of HIV subtype C in the study population was 1958 (95% highest posterior density [HPD]: 1931–1980), and the median estimated substitution rate among study pol sequences was 1.98x10-3 (95% HPD: 1.15x10-3–2.81x10-3) per site per year. Conclusions Phylogenetic analysis suggests that multiple HIV subtype C sublineages circulate among school age girls in South Africa. There were no substantive differences in the molecular epidemiology of HIV between control and intervention arms in the HPTN 068 trial.