Stone V E, Hogan J W, Schuman P, Rompalo A M, Howard A A, Korkontzelou C, Smith D K
Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2001 Oct 1;28(2):124-31. doi: 10.1097/00042560-200110010-00003.
Research regarding treatment adherence in chronic diseases, such as hypertension, suggests that increasing complexity in the medication regimen is associated with decreasing patient adherence. However, less is known about the relationship between regimen complexity and adherence in the treatment of HIV/AIDS.
To examine the relationship between antiretroviral (ART) regimen complexity and patient understanding of correct regimen dosing to adherence (missing doses in the past 1 and 3 days).
Cross-sectional survey of a cohort of women living with HIV/AIDS and enrolled in the HER (HIV Epidemiologic Research) Study.
Seventy-five percent of patients correctly understood the dosing frequency of their ART medications, 80% understood the food-dosing restrictions, whereas only 63% understood both. The percentage of patients with a correct understanding of dosing decreased with increasing regimen complexity (increased dosing frequency and food-dosing restrictions). Patients were more likely to have missed doses in the previous 3 days if they were taking ART medications three or more times per day or had to take one or more antiretrovirals on an empty stomach. A multivariate logistic regression model demonstrated that patients with less complex regimens (twice daily or less in frequency, no food-dosing restrictions) who correctly understood the dosing and food restrictions of their ART regimen were less likely to have skipped doses in the past three days (odds ratio [OR], 0.4; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.2-0.7) than those with more complex regimens. Younger age and higher CD4 count were also associated with a reduced likelihood of skipping doses. No association was found between adherence and race/ethnicity, current or past injection drug use, or education.
Self-reported adherence is better among patients with less complex ART regimens. This is in part because patients' understanding of regimen dosing decreases as regimen complexity increases. Therefore, simplifying antiretroviral regimens may have an important role in improving patients' adherence.
关于高血压等慢性病治疗依从性的研究表明,药物治疗方案的复杂性增加与患者依从性降低相关。然而,对于艾滋病病毒/艾滋病(HIV/AIDS)治疗中治疗方案复杂性与依从性之间的关系,人们了解较少。
探讨抗逆转录病毒(ART)治疗方案的复杂性与患者对正确方案剂量的理解以及依从性(过去1天和3天内漏服剂量)之间的关系。
对一组感染HIV/AIDS的女性进行横断面调查,她们均参与了HER(HIV流行病学研究)研究。
75%的患者正确理解了ART药物的给药频率,80%理解了食物与给药的限制,而同时理解两者的仅占63%。随着治疗方案复杂性的增加(给药频率增加和食物与给药限制增多),正确理解给药的患者百分比下降。如果患者每天服用ART药物三次或更多次,或者必须空腹服用一种或多种抗逆转录病毒药物,那么他们在前3天漏服药物的可能性更大。多因素逻辑回归模型显示,与治疗方案更复杂的患者相比,治疗方案不太复杂(频率为每日两次或更低,无食物与给药限制)且正确理解ART方案给药和食物限制的患者在过去三天内漏服药物的可能性较小(优势比[OR]为0.4;95%置信区间[CI]为0.2 - 0.7)。年龄较小和CD4细胞计数较高也与漏服药物的可能性降低相关。未发现依从性与种族/民族、当前或过去使用注射毒品或教育程度之间存在关联。
ART治疗方案不太复杂的患者自我报告的依从性更好。部分原因是随着治疗方案复杂性的增加,患者对方案给药的理解会降低。因此,简化抗逆转录病毒治疗方案可能在提高患者依从性方面发挥重要作用。