# High adherence to intermittent and continuous use of a contraceptive vaginal ring among women in a randomized controlled trial in Kigali, Rwanda

**Authors:** Evelyne Kestelyn, Jennifer Ilo Van Nuil, Marie Michelle Umulisa, Grace Umutoni, Alice Uwingabire, Irith De Baetselier, Mireille Uwineza, Stephen Agaba, Tania Crucitti, Thérèse Delvaux, Janneke H. H. M. van de Wijgert

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fgwh.2024.1278981 · Frontiers in Global Women's Health · 2024-04-11

## TL;DR

A study in Rwanda found high adherence to using a contraceptive vaginal ring, with participants reporting consistent use despite initial challenges.

## Contribution

The study introduces a mixed-methods approach to measure and understand adherence to contraceptive vaginal rings in an African context.

## Key findings

- Self-reported adherence was high in both intermittent and continuous use groups.
- Ring expulsions and removals decreased as participants became more familiar with the device.
- Triangulation of data revealed low discrepancies in adherence reporting.

## Abstract

The introduction of female-initiated drug-delivery methods, including vaginal rings, have proven to be a promising avenue to address sexually transmitted infections and unintended pregnancies, which disproportionally affects women and girls in sub-Saharan Africa. Efficient uptake of existing and new technologies such as vaginal rings requires in depth understanding of product adherence. This remains a major challenge as data on adherence to vaginal rings from African countries is limited. In this study, we explored adherence of contraceptive vaginal ring (NuvaRing®) use in Kigali, Rwanda using a mixed methods approach.

We collected quantitative and qualitative data at multiple time points from women participating in a clinical trial exploring the safety and acceptability of either intermittent or continuous use of the NuvaRing®. Various adherence categories were used including monthly and cumulative adherence measurement. The quantitative data were analysed using R and the qualitative data were analysed using a deductive, content-analytical approach based on categories related to the quantitative adherence measures. All data were compared and triangulated.

Data from 120 enrolled participants showed that self-reported adherence was high at every study visit in both study groups. At first study visit 80% of the intermittent ring users and 79.7% of the continuous ring users reported perfect adherence (assessed as “the ring was never out”). Reporting of ring expulsions and removals were highest (28.3%) at the beginning of the trial. Self-reported perfect ring adherence increased during the study and reports of ring expulsions and removals declined as familiarity with this contraceptive method increased. The percentage of women with perfect cumulative adherence was non-significantly higher in the intermittent (61.7%) than in the continuous use group (54.3%). The low rate of discrepant adherence data after triangulation (6%) is in line with the perception of the participants as adherent throughout the study.

Self-reported adherence in both study groups was high with removals and expulsions being within the expected product range. Comprehensive adherence data triangulation allowed for a deeper understanding of context-driven behaviour that shaped adherence patterns and challenges. Our data categorisation and triangulation approach has shown potential for implementation in future vaginal ring studies aiming to better understand and measure adherence.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** sexually transmitted infections (MESH:D012749), unintended pregnancies (MESH:D011254)
- **Chemicals:** NuvaRing (MESH:C516519), ring (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

62 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11047128/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11047128