Brothers Building Brothers by Breaking Barriers: Protocol for a Pilot Trial of a Telehealth Social Capital Intervention for Young Black Sexual Minority Men Living With HIV
Brothers Building Brothers by Breaking Barriers: Protocol for a Pilot Trial of a Telehealth Social Capital Intervention for Young Black Sexual Minority Men Living With HIV

Brothers Building Brothers by Breaking Barriers: Protocol for a Pilot Trial of a Telehealth Social Capital Intervention for Young Black Sexual Minority Men Living With HIV

JMIR Res Protoc. 2025 Dec 1;14:e69961. doi: 10.2196/69961.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Young Black sexual minority men are disproportionately affected by HIV, especially in the Southern United States. To address this, we developed Brothers Building Brothers by Breaking Barriers (B6) intervention with a goal of enhancing social capital and engagement in care among young Black sexual minority men living with HIV. However, we encountered challenges to feasibility in recruiting and engaging for an in-person intervention.

OBJECTIVE: The objectives of this study are to iteratively adapt the original B6 intervention for telehealth delivery (Phase 1), and pilot test the intervention through a waitlist-control trial to evaluate its feasibility, acceptability, and safety (Phase 2).

METHODS: In Phase 1, we used the assessment, decision, adaptation, production, topical experts, integration, training, and testing (ADAPT-ITT) framework to structure the iterative adaptation process of B6, working with a diverse study team and a Youth Advisory Board (YAB). After completing the preliminary adaptation process, we conducted initial Telehealth Brothers Building Brothers by Breaking Barriers (Tele-B6) pilot testing with a community partner organization. The result was a 5-week group-level intervention, delivered entirely remotely, consisting of a series of adapted activities to address bonding and bridging social capital, affirm intersectional identities, and engage in resilience-building processes. Following feedback integration from pilot-testing, we conducted Phase 2 with 60 young Black sexual minority men living with HIV recruited over the course of one year and who were randomized at the group level to either the immediate intervention or delayed (waitlist control) intervention group. Various data sources will be used to measure feasibility, acceptability, and safety, including surveys, postsession evaluation data, in-depth qualitative interviews, and review of medical records for HIV clinical outcomes.

RESULTS: Phase 1, the adaptation process of B6, began in fall 2022 and was completed in spring 2023. Phase 2, the implementation of the waitlist control trial, began in spring 2023 and concluded in summer 2024. Final follow-up assessments were completed in fall 2024 and the results of the mixed methods evaluation are expected in winter 2025.

CONCLUSIONS: The adaptation process and telehealth delivery of B6 will add to the knowledge of strengths-based interventions designed to improve care engagement among young Black sexual minority men living with HIV.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05829759,https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05829759.

INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/69961.

PMID:41325601 | DOI:10.2196/69961