Overview
ADHOC-LA is an observational study of people living with HIV who either are taking, or have taken, a long-acting injectable therapy to manage their HIV. Data from this study will be used to research the ways in which HIV impacts the lives of these patients.
Description
ADHOC-LA is an observational study that uses an online questionnaire to collect data on adults living with HIV who are currently taking, or have previously taken, long-acting injectable therapy to manage their HIV. The questionnaire includes information on sociodemographic factors, activities and interests, HIV diagnosis and status, health care use and satisfaction, antiretroviral therapy, comorbid medical conditions, health and well-being, substance use, and sexual practices.
Eligibility
Eligibility Criteria:
- Have an HIV-1 infection
- a) Currently take a long-acting injectable therapy for HIV supplied by ViiV as part of a ViiV-sponsored, long-acting injectables therapy trial (LATTE-2, ATLAS-2M, CUSTOMIZE, POLAR, FLAIR, or SOLAR), or
- Currently take a long-acting injectable therapy for HIV prescribed by their provider, not in conjunction with a ViiV-sponsored clinical trial, or
- No longer taking long-acting injectable therapy for HIV, but previously received
three or more injections of long-acting injectable therapy, either:
- Supplied by ViiV as part of a ViiV-sponsored, long-acting injectables therapy trial (LATTE-2, ATLAS-2M, CUSTOMIZE, POLAR, FLAIR, or SOLAR), or
- Prescribed by their provider, unrelated to a ViiV-sponsored clinical trial.
- Age 18 or above
- Have no known acute medical problem requiring immediate inpatient treatment
- Able to read and write in English
- Able and willing to provide online informed consent and to complete the online profile
- Not currently enrolled in another clinical trial in which the participant is receiving a long-acting injectable therapy for HIV.
Participants who meet the eligibility criteria but are still receiving ViiV-supplied drug
may enroll in the registry, but will not begin the online questionnaire until they are
rolled off of ViiV-supplied long-acting injectable therapy.