2 55 86 5 (1 ) 34/300 (11 ) Two had sex, one on D2 and the other D4. Displacements were mostly due to tampering with the device. All were able to void without intervention except one who used a razor blade to open up the dry necrotic foreskin. All were considered mild AEs. Save one which was considered moderate. Partial detachment exposes raw surface that is thought to contribute to high pain scores during RG7800 site device removal. No additional analgesics were given during AUY922 site removal as pain was short lived (Mild AE) A new event that required a surgeon’s intervention (classified as moderate AE). These clients did not heed the counsel of abstinence Considered mild AE 99/625 (16 ) 4 (average score ?in VAS 0?0) 4 required suture control and 1 required pressure control Pain short lived #2 minutesDevice partial self detachment n =66/300 (22 )Pseudoparaphimosis* n = 625 Clients engaging in sexual intercourse n = 300 Events during removal Pain n = 625 Those with scores 8 Over all pain score1 6/300 (2 )Bleeding n =Both Moderate AEsPLOS ONE | www.plosone.orgAdverse Events of PrePex in Ugandan Urban SettingTable 2. Cont.Timing Events during entire periodAdverse Event Unscheduled visits n =ValuesComments These were for various reasons; pain, odour and convenience. For pain, clients were encouraged to take analgesics as previously prescribed. These clients did have the devices removed from private clinics because they couldn’t return due to lack of time and the other had a car accident and reported that the device fell off, foreskin was removed in a private clinicThose that didn’t return for device removal*This was deemed the appropriate term for retracted necrotic dry foreskin causing pain and covering the outer black device ring, therefore posing a challenge of removal. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086631.tinterventions. Learning from the men that adhere to abstinence may be valuable. We paid attention to the right messaging, emphasizing no sex before 6 weeks, not even with a condom. We emphasized the fact that some or many will indeed look healed, with no pain and no open wound long before six weeks elapse but that does not imply that it is safe to resume sexual intercourse; for PrePex the instructed period of abstinence was 6 weeks after device removal. For all the device displacement cases, a formal surgical SMC was performed uneventfully and the AEs were resolved. This experience suggests that, in the context of program implementation, there should be a service available to manage AEs. Either a PrePex only center with a functional referral pathway to a center that is capable of performing a surgical SMC or all PrePex service sites should have the capability to offer both services 24/7.BleedingFive clients bled immediately after removal of the device. The nature of the bleeding among four required a stitch or two to achieve haemostasis. Three of these had spurting vessels, likely to be arterial, from the under lying granulation tissue and perhaps this was due to disruption of granulation tissue caused by either the spatula `digging’ during the process of device removal or in the process of excising the necrotic foreskin when the granulation tissue/normal skin edge is disrupted by the sometimes inadvertent pull and tag action. The personnel managing these events were capable of applying haemostatic stitches. The programmatic implications of this are that the AE managing personnel should be capable of performing suture haemostasis. One of the clients admitted.2 55 86 5 (1 ) 34/300 (11 ) Two had sex, one on D2 and the other D4. Displacements were mostly due to tampering with the device. All were able to void without intervention except one who used a razor blade to open up the dry necrotic foreskin. All were considered mild AEs. Save one which was considered moderate. Partial detachment exposes raw surface that is thought to contribute to high pain scores during device removal. No additional analgesics were given during removal as pain was short lived (Mild AE) A new event that required a surgeon’s intervention (classified as moderate AE). These clients did not heed the counsel of abstinence Considered mild AE 99/625 (16 ) 4 (average score ?in VAS 0?0) 4 required suture control and 1 required pressure control Pain short lived #2 minutesDevice partial self detachment n =66/300 (22 )Pseudoparaphimosis* n = 625 Clients engaging in sexual intercourse n = 300 Events during removal Pain n = 625 Those with scores 8 Over all pain score1 6/300 (2 )Bleeding n =Both Moderate AEsPLOS ONE | www.plosone.orgAdverse Events of PrePex in Ugandan Urban SettingTable 2. Cont.Timing Events during entire periodAdverse Event Unscheduled visits n =ValuesComments These were for various reasons; pain, odour and convenience. For pain, clients were encouraged to take analgesics as previously prescribed. These clients did have the devices removed from private clinics because they couldn’t return due to lack of time and the other had a car accident and reported that the device fell off, foreskin was removed in a private clinicThose that didn’t return for device removal*This was deemed the appropriate term for retracted necrotic dry foreskin causing pain and covering the outer black device ring, therefore posing a challenge of removal. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086631.tinterventions. Learning from the men that adhere to abstinence may be valuable. We paid attention to the right messaging, emphasizing no sex before 6 weeks, not even with a condom. We emphasized the fact that some or many will indeed look healed, with no pain and no open wound long before six weeks elapse but that does not imply that it is safe to resume sexual intercourse; for PrePex the instructed period of abstinence was 6 weeks after device removal. For all the device displacement cases, a formal surgical SMC was performed uneventfully and the AEs were resolved. This experience suggests that, in the context of program implementation, there should be a service available to manage AEs. Either a PrePex only center with a functional referral pathway to a center that is capable of performing a surgical SMC or all PrePex service sites should have the capability to offer both services 24/7.BleedingFive clients bled immediately after removal of the device. The nature of the bleeding among four required a stitch or two to achieve haemostasis. Three of these had spurting vessels, likely to be arterial, from the under lying granulation tissue and perhaps this was due to disruption of granulation tissue caused by either the spatula `digging’ during the process of device removal or in the process of excising the necrotic foreskin when the granulation tissue/normal skin edge is disrupted by the sometimes inadvertent pull and tag action. The personnel managing these events were capable of applying haemostatic stitches. The programmatic implications of this are that the AE managing personnel should be capable of performing suture haemostasis. One of the clients admitted.