# Factors associated with awareness of and willingness to use PrEP among stable, heterosexual HIV‐serodifferent couples in seven African countries, 2019–2022

**Authors:** J. Danielle Sharpe, Rebecca L. Laws, Christine A. West, Gaston Djomand, Jared Omolo, Dinah Ramaabya, Michelle Li, Sindisiwe Dlamini, Maletsatsi Motebang, Nthuseng Marake, Victor Singano, Washington Ozituosauka, Carter McCabe, Isabel Sathane, Nzali Kancheya, Tina Chisenga, Rickie Malaba, Getrude Ncube, Neena M. Philip, Samuel Biraro, Man E. Charurat, Italia Rolle, Andrew C. Voetsch

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/jia2.26446 · Journal of the International AIDS Society · 2025-06-18

## TL;DR

This study explores what influences awareness and willingness to use PrEP among HIV-serodifferent couples in seven African countries, finding that lower HIV risk and education are linked to higher PrEP acceptance.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific demographic and behavioral factors associated with PrEP awareness and willingness in HIV-serodifferent couples in sub-Saharan Africa.

## Key findings

- Higher PrEP awareness is linked to being female, higher education, and lower HIV risk.
- PrEP willingness is associated with employment, prior PrEP awareness, and lower HIV risk.
- Encouraging HIV status disclosure and education could increase PrEP use in this population.

## Abstract

HIV pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an effective biomedical intervention for preventing HIV; however, PrEP adoption initially lagged across sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA) and may have been affected by barriers to engagement in PrEP care. Stable, heterosexual HIV‐serodifferent couples are a priority population of PrEP expansion efforts. We assessed factors associated with PrEP awareness and willingness among HIV‐serodifferent couples in SSA to guide PrEP interventions for this population.

We conducted a cross‐sectional analysis using pooled data from nationally representative, two‐stage cluster sampling, HIV‐focused household surveys completed during 2019–2022 in seven African countries. We analysed data from 1738 persons without HIV aged ≥15 years in stable, heterosexual HIV‐serodifferent couples and included clinical information from their partners with HIV. Higher HIV risk was defined by unawareness of a partner's HIV‐positive status or having a partner with an unsuppressed viral load (≥200 copies/ml). Lower HIV risk was defined by awareness of a partner's HIV‐positive status and having a partner with a suppressed viral load (<200 copies/ml). We conducted multivariable logistic regression using survey weights and jackknife variance estimation to assess factors associated with PrEP awareness and willingness.

Overall, 18.1% were aware of PrEP, 69.1% were willing to use PrEP and 5.1% had ever used PrEP. Forty‐four percent had higher HIV risk. Higher odds of PrEP awareness were associated with being female (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 1.73; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.15–2.59), secondary education or higher (aOR: 6.42; 95% CI: 2.97–13.91) and lower HIV risk (aOR: 1.58; 95% CI: 1.00–2.48). Higher odds of PrEP willingness were associated with employment in the past year (aOR: 1.55; 95% CI: 1.01–2.37), previous PrEP awareness (aOR: 2.44; 95% CI: 1.36–4.36) and lower HIV risk (aOR: 1.70; 95% CI: 1.07–2.70).

Persons in stable, heterosexual HIV‐serodifferent couples with lower HIV risk were more aware of and willing to use PrEP than those with higher risk. Our findings highlight the importance of encouraging HIV status disclosure, educating about HIV‐serodifference and PrEP, and providing PrEP linkage during HIV testing and prevention counselling to increase PrEP awareness, willingness and use among HIV‐serodifferent couples in SSA.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HIV (MESH:D015658)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (no rank) [taxon 11676]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

75 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12177106/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12177106