STI Response and Recommendations Under PrEP (STIRRUP)
Project Number5R01MH128130-04
Former Number1R01MH128130-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderJENNESS, SAMUEL
Awardee OrganizationEMORY UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
ABSTRACT
STIRRUP (STI Responses and Recommendations Under PrEP) combines big data streams with mathemat-
ical modeling and economic decision science to understand the optimal design of STI screening in PrEP care.
Cases of gonorrhea, chlamydia, and syphilis have increased substantially over the past decade and a dispro-
portionate disease burden falls on men who have sex with men (MSM). The persistently high STI rates among
MSM are driven by the high proportion of asymptomatic infections and low rates of routine screening that
would detect these infections. Most MSM who use PrEP are at elevated risk of acquiring STIs. PrEP care
therefore provides a critical opportunity to reach and clinically engage a population who could benefit from
linked HIV and STI prevention services. Screening for STIs in PrEP care following CDC recommendations can
counterbalance the effects of increases in sexual risk behavior by treating asymptomatic STIs to prevent ongo-
ing STI transmission chains. However, patterns of STI screening in PrEP care are far from recommended
levels, with substantial variation by demographics and geography. Models informing clinical practice and public
health policy must therefore incorporate data streams that span the range of healthcare settings where PrEP
care is offered to these groups, and where it can be improved. Following an Extended, Multi-Disease PrEP
Continuum of Care that includes steps for STI ancillary services and PrEP retention, we seek to test a leading
hypothesis about the bidirectionality of these two steps: that ongoing comprehensive PrEP care is an efficient
mechanism for routine STI screening and treatment, but that frequent STI ancillary services may often be a
burden to retention in PrEP care. STIRRUP includes three SPECIFIC AIMS: AIM 1. We will extract, collect,
analyze, and synthesize information on PrEP care, sexual behavior, mental health diagnoses, and HIV/STI
screening patterns for MSM from electronic health records and epidemiological studies in three types of PrEP
programs (academic, public, and private) in two geographic settings (Boston and Atlanta) distinguished by their
HIV/STI burden and demographics. Analyses will guide development of an ethical framework for big data in
modeling. AIM 2. With these data, we will build network-based race-stratified transmission models of four co-
circulating infections (HIV, chlamydia, syphilis, and gonorrhea) among MSM at three exposure sites (urogeni-
tal, rectal, and pharyngeal). These models will investigate the relationship between PrEP use and HIV/STI
incidence given current bacterial STI screening/treatment (pre- and post-PrEP initiation), with a theory-driven
focus on racial/ethnic disparities and mental health predictors across and within each city. AIM 3. We will eval-
uate public health policies and clinical practice strategies for screening and treatment of STIs among
heterogenous groups of MSM using PrEP. Economic models will estimate the cost-effectiveness of policies
individualized to clinical histories, and evaluate the optimal approach to targeting societal resources to reduce
out-of-pocket user costs for ancillary PrEP services that could improve long-term PrEP retention.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
Reducing the overall incidence of and racial/ethnicity disparities in HIV and other sexually transmitted
infections (STI) among men who have sex with men in the United States will require comprehensive PrEP care
designed for the heterogeneity of PrEP users across different epidemiological contexts. The STIRRUP Study
will directly generate prevention science to support clinical practice and policy decisions on STI screening
within PrEP care for men who have sex with men (MSM) in the United States.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AIDS preventionAccelerationAccountingAddressAfrican AmericanAmerican menBehavioralBig DataBlack raceBostonCaringChlamydiaCitiesClinicalContinuity of Patient CareDataDetectionDevelopmentDiagnosisDiseaseEconomic ModelsEconomicsElectronic Health RecordEpidemicEpidemiologyEthicsEthnic OriginEtiologyGenitourinary systemGeographyGoalsGonorrheaGuidelinesHIVHealth PolicyHeterogeneityIncidenceInfectionInterventionLinkMental HealthModelingModernizationNetwork-basedPatternPharyngeal structurePoliciesPopulationPreventionPrivatizationPublic HealthRaceRecommendationRecording of previous eventsRectumResourcesRiskSTI preventionScienceServicesSex BehaviorSexually Transmitted DiseasesShapesSiteSwabSyphilisTestingUncertaintyUnsafe SexVariantVisitblack men who have sex with menburden of illnessclinical practicecondomscostcost effectivenesscost estimatedata integrationdata streamsdemographicsdesigndisparity reductionepidemiology studyethnic disparityfallsgeographic differencehealth care settingshigh risk menimprovedinfection burdeninfection ratemathematical modelmen who have sex with menmen's grouppre-exposure prophylaxispreventprevention serviceprogramsracial disparityresponseroutine screeningscale upscreeningsexual risk behaviorsuccesstheoriestransmission process
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