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Tyrel J Starks, Daniel Sauermilch, Kendell M Doyle, Seth Kalichman, Demetria Cain, Main Partner Relationships and the HIV Care Cascade: Examining the Predictive Utility of Sexual Agreements, Partner Concordance, and Drug Use Among Sexual Minority Men Living With HIV in the USA, Annals of Behavioral Medicine, Volume 58, Issue 6, June 2024, Pages 422–431, https://doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaae019
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Abstract
The past 15 years have seen increasing attention to relationship factors among sexual minority male (SMM) couples at high risk for HIV infection. Research has largely focused on HIV prevention outcomes. Outcomes relevant to SMM living with HIV have received relatively less attention.
This study evaluated associations between relational covariates (relationship status, sexual agreements, and seroconcordance) and HIV care cascade outcomes (having a current antiretroviral therapy [ART] prescription, ART adherence, viral load (VL) testing, and VL detectability) above and beyond cannabis and stimulant drug use.
Adult SMM (n = 36,874) living with HIV in the USA were recruited between November 1, 2017 and March 15, 2020 through social networking applications. They completed a cross-sectional survey online.
Nonmonogamous SMM with serodiscordant partners were most likely to have an ART prescription. Those with seroconcordant partners (regardless of sexual agreements) were least likely to be adherent. While relational covariates were not associated with VL testing, SMM in nonmonogamous relationships with serodiscordant partners were significantly more likely to have an undetectable VL. Those in monogamous relationships with seroconcordant partners were significantly less likely to have an undetectable VL.
SMM with seroconcordant partners and monogamous sexual agreements may experience diminished interpersonal motivation for HIV care engagement. HIV care cascade retention messages that emphasize the prevention of onward transmission may have limited relevance for these SMM. Novel intervention strategies are needed to enhance HIV care outcomes in this population, ideally ones that incorporate attention to drug use.
Lay Summary
The majority of people living with HIV in the USA are sexual minority men (SMM). Whereas substantial work has examined HIV prevention in male couples, relatively little has examined relationship factors associated with HIV care outcomes. This study examined whether relationship status, main partner serostatus (seroconcordant vs. serodiscordant), and sexual agreements (monogamous vs. nonmonogamous) were associated with HIV care cascade outcomes (having a current antiretroviral therapy [ART] prescription, ART adherence, viral load testing, and viral load detectability) above and beyond cannabis and stimulant drug use. We surveyed adult SMM (n = 36,874) living with HIV in the USA between November 2017 and March 2020. Across outcomes where significant between-group differences were observed, results generally indicated partnered SMM with serodiscordant partners—particularly those in nonmonogamous relationships—were more likely to be retained in the HIV care cascade; meanwhile, SMM with seroconcordant partners—particularly those in monogamous relationships—were most vulnerable to attrition in the HIV care cascade. Given this pattern of findings, it is conceivable that efforts to motivate linkage and retention along the HIV care cascade have emphasized the prevention of onward transmission while failing to capitalize on or acknowledge health enhancement as an additional (and coequal) source of motivation.