Document Type

Article

Publication Date

11-13-2024

Publication Title

JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Long-acting (LA) injectable preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and on-demand PrEP may improve overall PrEP uptake among men who have sex with men (MSM), but little is understood about the PrEP option preferences of MSM in practical scenarios where they may choose between various PrEP options. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to examine the preferences for starting various PrEP options among a US nationwide online convenience sample of MSM from September 2021 to February 2022. METHODS: Participants reporting no prior HIV diagnosis were provided brief descriptions of each PrEP option and were asked, "If [PrEP option] were available from your local doctor and you could access it for free, would you go to your doctor in the next month to start [PrEP option]?" Those who said "yes" to multiple options were asked to rank them in order of preference. MSM currently taking daily oral (DO) PrEP were asked whether they would switch to on-demand or LA PrEP options. Log binomial models were created to examine the association between willingness to start or switch to on-demand and LA PrEP with various sociodemographic and behavioral factors. RESULTS: In the analytic sample (N=7760), among the participants who did not use any PrEP in the past 12 months (n=5108, 66%), 54% (n=2445) reported willingness to start at least 1 PrEP option and 41% (n=1845) of participants showed interest in starting multiple PrEP options. Overall, the highest willingness was reported for on-demand PrEP (n=2235, 44%), followed by DO PrEP (n=2174, 43%) and LA PrEP (n=1482, 29%). LA PrEP was ranked first among those interested in multiple options. Characteristics associated with ranking LA PrEP as a first option to start PrEP versus DO or on-demand PrEP were region of residence (residing in the West vs Northeast), report of sexually transmitted infection diagnosis in the past year, report of illicit drug use other than marijuana in the past year, and prior awareness of LA PrEP. Among current DO PrEP users (n=2379, 31%), 58% (n=1386) were willing to switch to on-demand or LA PrEP, and LA PrEP was ranked first among participants who were open to switching to both options. Willingness to switch to LA PrEP was higher among those who used illicit drugs other than marijuana in the past year, who heard of LA PrEP prior to the survey, and those who took 15 or less doses of oral PrEP in the last 30 days. CONCLUSIONS: LA PrEP was the highest-ranked option among most MSM who were willing to try multiple options or switch from DO PrEP. These findings highlight that LA PrEP might fill coverage gaps among MSM who use illicit drugs, have had a recent sexually transmitted infection diagnosis, and have less than optimal DO PrEP adherence.

First Page

e62801

PubMed ID

39536313

Volume

10

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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