FastPrEP: A protocol to evaluate uptake, coverage, and effectiveness of a youth-focused, decentralised and differentiated district-wide HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis program.
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Introduction : Adolescents and young people (AYP) are at increased risk of HIV acquisition and onward transmission in South Africa. The benefits of oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) are well established, however, epidemic impact depends on access, effective use and scale-up. Project Design : FastPrEP is an implementation science project that aims to scale up oral and novel PrEP modalities through differentiated service delivery to improve uptake and optimal use of PrEP in key populations. Designed to leverage some of the attributes that make fast-food popular such as efficiency, access, variety (choice) and flexibility, FastPrEP aims to further “demedicalise” the buy-in and access to HIV prevention methods. Attracting young people regardless of HIV serostatus, FastPrEP will deliver PrEP as part of integrated sexual and reproductive health (SRH) packages tailored for key youth populations using mobile clinics (n = 4) and local government clinics (n = 12) as “hubs” for PrEP initiation. These and other community-based outlets such as youth clubs, courier delivery, schools and other youth frequented venues will serve as “spokes” for PrEP maintenance. FastPrEP aims to scale up PrEP in a dense, HIV-burdened, peri-urban community of approximately one million people in Cape Town. We will adopt the RE-AIM framework to evaluate the FastPrEP intervention among diverse AYP aged 15–29 years (targeting approximately 25 000 AYP) and their sexual partners of any age. We will use a phased approach to build the program and evaluate PrEP uptake and persistence in AYP over time. Objectives : The overall objective is to evaluate whether community-wide, differentiated delivery of PrEP with regard to user choice leads to greater PrEP uptake among sexually active youths who would benefit most from comprehensive HIV protection. Secondary objectives include evaluating the differences in demographic, socio-behavioural, and risk behaviours between PrEP users and non-PrEP users to determine the effectiveness of demand creation strategies and evaluate the utility of different PrEP outlets. Conclusion : FastPrEP will evaluate the scale-up of community-delivered, differentiated PrEP to AYP and their sexual partners and will improve understanding of differentiated delivery of PrEP services on PrEP persistence in key populations.