Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of integrating the management of depression into routine HIV care in Uganda (the HIV + D trial): a protocol for a cluster-randomised trial
Date
2021-05-12
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Nature: International Journal of Mental Health Systems
Abstract
An estimated 8-30% of people living with HIV (PLWH) have depressive disorders (DD) in sub-
Saharan Africa. Of these, the majority are untreated in most of HIV care services. There is evidence from
low- and middle- income countries of the effectiveness of both psychological treatments and
antidepressant medication for the treatment of DD among PLWH, but no evidence on how these can be
integrated into routine HIV care. This protocol describes a cluster-randomised trial to evaluate the
effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the HIV+D model for the integration of a collaborative stepped
care intervention for DD into routine HIV care, which we have developed and piloted in Uganda.
Methods: Forty public health care facilities that provide HIV care in Kalungu, Masaka and Wakiso
Districts will be randomly selected to participate in the trial. Each facility will recruit 10-30 eligible PLWH
with DD and the total sample size will be 1200. The clusters will be randomised 1:1 to receive Enhanced
Usual Care alone (EUC, i.e. HIV clinicians trained in Mental Health Gap Action Programme including
guidelines on when and where to refer patients for psychiatric care) or EUC plus HIV+D (psychoeducation,
Behavioural Activation, antidepressant medication and referral to a supervising mental health worker,
delivered in a collaborative care stepwise approach). Eligibility criteria are PLWH attending the clinic, aged
>18 years who screen positive on a depression screening questionnaire (Patient Health Questionnaire,
PHQ-9≥10). The primary outcome is the mean depressive disorder symptom severity scores (assessed
using the PHQ-9) at 3 months post-randomisation, with secondary mental health, disability, HIV and
economic outcomes measured at 3 and 12 months. The cost-effectiveness of EUC with HIV+D will be
assessed from both the health system and the societal perspectives by collecting health system, patient
and productivity costs and mean DD severity scores at 3 months, additional to health and non-health
related quality of life measures (EQ-5D-5L and OxCAP-MH).
Discussion: The study ndings will inform policy makers and practitioners on the cost-effectiveness of a
stepped care approach to integrate depression management in routine care for PLWH in low-resource
settings.
Description
20 p.
Keywords
Cluster randomised trial, Depression, Routine HIV care, Public health care facilities
Citation
Kinyanda, Eugene ...et al (2021). Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of integrating the management of depression into routine HIV care in Uganda (the HIV + D trial): a protocol for a cluster-randomised trial.https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN86760765.