Medication non-adherence and cocaine use must be reduced among people with HIV to maximize their health. Although non-adherence is not unique to cocaine abusers, these patients are at very high risk of sporadic non-adherence. Intermittent non-adherence puts patients at the highest risk for developing medication-resistant strains of HIV. There is an urgent need for innovative behavioral treatments to address these two problems in a combined approach. Brief interventions are especially needed that could be incorporated into HIV care delivery systems or substance abuse treatment programs. Interventions with two targets are a promising adaptation of motivational interviewing (MI), a brief intervention with good evidence of efficacy in substance abuse. Funds are requested to support the development and pilot testing of a 4 session, dual-focused MI intervention, Cocaine and Adherence Readiness Training (CART) for non-adherent cocaine abusers with HIV. The primary aim of this Stage 1 study is to determine if a larger efficacy trial with the finalized intervention is warranted. We propose to accomplish the following specific aims to provide that evidence. 1) Develop CART, a novel MI-based combination intervention for HIV+ cocaine abusers that increases medication adherence and reduces cocaine use, through conducting pre-pilot sessions, adapting the intervention iteratively, and developing a therapy manual for a pilot trial. CART will include a) assessment of adherence and substance use, attitudes and goals related to change, and a decisional balance exercise, b) personalized feedback of risks, explorations of readiness, and goal setting, c) change planning, eliciting potential barriers to change, updating readiness ratings, and taking initial steps to change, and d) finalizing the change plan, eliciting continued commitment, and building self-efficacy. 2) Develop and validate rating scales of therapist competence to the intervention 3) Develop a training protocol for therapists delivering the experimental intervention and develop ratings of therapist competence and adherence to the intervention. 4) Test the finalized CART intervention vs. a minimal attention control condition in a randomized pilot study (n=50) to estimate effect sizes for primary outcomes; adherence rate and cocaine use severity. 5) Investigate the impact of potential mediator variables including baseline cocaine and adherence levels and patterns, problem severity in each domain, psychiatric comorbidity, and transtheoretical model variables (self-efficacy, stages and processes of change) on intervention completion, research retention, and primary outcomes. This study will yield important clinical innovations to improve the health of cocaine abusers with HIV, provide materials needed for a Stage 2 trial, and provide directions and methods for future research on improving adherence and reducing cocaine use in people with HIV. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DA016554-02
Application #
6751641
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-AARR-8 (01))
Program Officer
Kahana, Shoshana Y
Project Start
2003-06-01
Project End
2007-03-31
Budget Start
2004-05-01
Budget End
2005-03-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2004
Total Cost
$375,000
Indirect Cost
Name
Virginia Commonwealth University
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
105300446
City
Richmond
State
VA
Country
United States
Zip Code
23298
Read, Gaia; Ingersoll, Karen S (2016) Which Patient Characteristics Among Cocaine Users with HIV Relate to Drug Use and Adherence Outcomes Following a Dual-Focused Intervention? AIDS Behav 20:633-45
Wolfe, Hannah; Haller, Deborah L; Benoit, Ellen et al. (2013) Developing PeerLink to engage out-of-care HIV+ substance users: training peers to deliver a peer-led motivational intervention with fidelity. AIDS Care 25:888-94
Hettema, Jennifer E; Hosseinbor, Sharzad; Ingersoll, Karen S (2012) Feasibility and reliability of interactive voice response assessment of HIV medication adherence: research and clinical implications. HIV Clin Trials 13:271-7
Schafer, Katherine R; Brant, Julia; Gupta, Shruti et al. (2012) Intimate partner violence: a predictor of worse HIV outcomes and engagement in care. AIDS Patient Care STDS 26:356-65
Yeagley, Erin K; Kulbok, Pamela A; O'Laughlen, Mary C et al. (2012) The feasibility and acceptability of a motivational interviewing intervention for HIV-infected youth in an urban outpatient clinic: a pilot study. J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care 23:366-70
Mave, Vidya; Shere, Dhananjay; Gupte, Nikhil et al. (2012) Vitamin D deficiency is common among HIV-infected breastfeeding mothers in Pune, India, but is not associated with mother-to-child HIV transmission. HIV Clin Trials 13:278-83
Winstead-Derlega, Christopher; Rafaly, Mary; Delgado, Sarah et al. (2012) A pilot study of delivering peer health messages in an HIV clinic via mobile media. Telemed J E Health 18:464-9
Ingersoll, Karen S; Farrell-Carnahan, Leah; Cohen-Filipic, Jessye et al. (2011) A pilot randomized clinical trial of two medication adherence and drug use interventions for HIV+ crack cocaine users. Drug Alcohol Depend 116:177-87
Farrell Carnahan, Leah; Fabbri, Stefania; Ingersoll, Karen (2011) Technicalities: Getting and staying connected to people living with HIV/AIDS in the southern United States. Patient Educ Couns 83:139-40; author reply 141
Ingersoll, Karen S; Cropsey, Karen L; Heckman, Carolyn J (2009) A test of motivational plus nicotine replacement interventions for HIV positive smokers. AIDS Behav 13:545-54

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