Expanding access and impact of tuberculosis preventive therapy: Community-friendly delivery and monitoring of TPT to improve uptake and reduce TB transmission - Enter the text here that is the new abstract information for your application. International and Kenyan guidelines recommend TB preventive therapy (TPT) for people with HIV (PWH) and other people at high risk for TB, including close contacts of people with TB. Despite the evidence for reduced morbidity and mortality for people with HIV (PWH) who receive TPT, and guidelines recommending use, there remains a substantial gap between people recommended to receive and people who actually receive and complete a course of TPT. The 2022 WHO Global TB Report highlighted the growing gap in access and provision of TPT, which has been aggravated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Bridging this gap is a Kenyan and global priority. With the recent availability and evidence for newer, shorter regimens of TPT, a transformation of HIV care delivery models (in part forced by the COVID-19 pandemic) and evolving national guidelines for TPT, it is increasingly urgent to explore new person-friendly models of TPT delivery to inform programmatic guidance that results in greater uptake, adherence, and completion of TPT. HIV care transformed to adopt “differentiated service delivery” (DSD) models, which encourage community-delivered care, infrequent clinic/facility visits, multi- month dispensing, limited laboratory monitoring, and task-shifted treatment models to deliver comprehensive HIV care to stable adults in community settings. These successful models for differentiated HIV care delivery may be able to be adapted to include TPT. The availability of safe, effective, short-course TPT (i.e. 3HP, 3HR) with limited monitoring requirements suggests that similar community-based and multi-month dispensing models may be adapted to scale essential TPT to populations who most need it, including PWH, young child contacts, and all household contacts of people with TB. We will explore two approaches of adapting HIV differentiated services to TB prevention. We hypothesize that people who receive differentiated TPT delivery have higher rates of completion of a course of TPT than people who receive standard-of-care clinic-based TPT. We will 1) conduct a randomized controlled trial of DSD care (multi-month dispensing) vs. clinic standard-of-care TPT delivery in two priority populations for TPT in Kenya: household contacts of people with TB and PWH, 2) investigate the impact of DSD TPT on household and community TB transmission with follow-up testing and mathematical modeling, and 3) examine preferences, barriers and facilitators of TPT completion and TPT implementation using qualitative research. Together, this research will establish the foundation for implementation studies of optimized patient and community-friendly, differentiated TPT delivery approaches to increase TPT uptake and completion in Kenya and ultimately decrease morbidity, transmission, and mortality from TB.