JMIR Research Protocols (Apr 2024)

Experimentally Induced Reductions in Alcohol Consumption and Brain, Cognitive, and Clinical Outcomes in Older Persons With and Those Without HIV Infection (30-Day Challenge Study): Protocol for a Nonrandomized Clinical Trial

  • Robert L Cook,
  • Veronica L Richards,
  • Joseph M Gullett,
  • Brenda D G Lerner,
  • Zhi Zhou,
  • Eric C Porges,
  • Yan Wang,
  • Christopher W Kahler,
  • Nancy P Barnett,
  • Zhigang Li,
  • Suresh Pallikkuth,
  • Emmanuel Thomas,
  • Allan Rodriguez,
  • Kendall J Bryant,
  • Smita Ghare,
  • Shirish Barve,
  • Varan Govind,
  • Jessy G Dévieux,
  • Ronald A Cohen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/53684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13
p. e53684

Abstract

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BackgroundBoth alcohol consumption and HIV infection are associated with worse brain, cognitive, and clinical outcomes in older adults. However, the extent to which brain and cognitive dysfunction is reversible with reduction or cessation of drinking is unknown. ObjectiveThe 30-Day Challenge study was designed to determine whether reduction or cessation of drinking would be associated with improvements in cognition, reduction of systemic and brain inflammation, and improvement in HIV-related outcomes in adults with heavy drinking. MethodsThe study design was a mechanistic experimental trial, in which all participants received an alcohol reduction intervention followed by repeated assessments of behavioral and clinical outcomes. Persons were eligible if they were 45 years of age or older, had weekly alcohol consumption of 21 or more drinks (men) or 14 or more drinks (women), and were not at high risk of alcohol withdrawal. After a baseline assessment, participants received an intervention consisting of contingency management (money for nondrinking days) for at least 30 days followed by a brief motivational interview. After this, participants could either resume drinking or not. Study questionnaires, neurocognitive assessments, neuroimaging, and blood, urine, and stool samples were collected at baseline, 30 days, 90 days, and 1 year after enrollment. ResultsWe enrolled 57 persons with heavy drinking who initiated the contingency management protocol (mean age 56 years, SD 4.6 years; 63%, n=36 male, 77%, n=44 Black, and 58%, n=33 people with HIV) of whom 50 completed 30-day follow-up and 43 the 90-day follow-up. The planned study procedures were interrupted and modified due to the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020-2021. ConclusionsThis was the first study seeking to assess changes in brain (neuroimaging) and cognition after alcohol intervention in nontreatment-seeking people with HIV together with people without HIV as controls. Study design strengths, limitations, and lessons for future study design considerations are discussed. Planned analyses are in progress, after which deidentified study data will be available for sharing. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT03353701; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03353701 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/53684