Castillo E, Palepu A, Beardsell A, Akagi L, Yip B, Montaner J S G, Hogg R S
Department of Health Care and Epideiology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
AIDS Care. 2004 May;16(4):446-57. doi: 10.1080/09540120410001683385.
Adherence to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is necessary to achieve long-term effectiveness. The impact of HIV/AIDS-specific pharmacy services on patient adherence and HIV viral suppression is currently not well described. This study aimed to compare the impact of differing levels of HIV-pharmacy care on adherence and time to HIV viral suppression among participants on HAART enrolled in a population-based HIV/AIDS drug treatment programme in British Columbia. We performed a retrospective observational study of 788 treatment-naïve patients who started HAART between August 1997 and July 2000 and were followed until 31 March 2002. The degree of outpatient pharmacy care was defined according to pharmacy dispensing site for the participants' first prescription of HAART: highest at the AIDS-tertiary care hospital outpatient pharmacies, intermediate at HIV/AIDS drug treatment programme funded off-site pharmacies and lowest at family physician's offices. Cox-proportional hazard models examined the independent effect of pharmacy dispensing site on time to two consecutive HIV viral suppressions controlling for other prognostic factors including physicians' experience, age, gender, injection drug use, use of therapy containing NNRTI versus PI, adherence >90%, AIDS diagnosis at baseline, baseline CD4 cell count and HIV viral load. The median time on antiretrovirals was 28 months (IQR=14-38). There were 489 (62.1%) participants who obtained their medications from the AIDS-tertiary care outpatient pharmacies; 98 (12.4%) from off-site pharmacies and 201 (25.5%) from their physicians' offices. The proportion of patients exhibiting >90% adherence to treatment was observed to be higher among patients receiving their HAART at the AIDS-tertiary care pharmacies compared to off-site pharmacies and to physicians' offices (70.4, 59.2 and 55.7%, respectively; p=0.0001). After adjusting for other prognostic factors, subjects who were first dispensed medications from the AIDS-tertiary care pharmacy were 1.42 times (CI: 1.10-1.84) more likely to achieve HIV viral suppression than those getting their medications from off-site pharmacies and physicians' offices. Providing regular outpatient pharmacy care is independently associated with improved HIV viral load response through enhanced adherence to HAART. Standardization of pharmacy practices for dispensing HAART may improve outcomes for patients who receive their HIV medications from other non-tertiary care pharmacy sites.
坚持高效抗逆转录病毒疗法(HAART)对于实现长期疗效至关重要。目前,针对艾滋病毒/艾滋病的药房服务对患者依从性和艾滋病毒病毒抑制的影响尚未得到充分描述。本研究旨在比较不同水平的艾滋病毒药房护理对不列颠哥伦比亚省一项基于人群的艾滋病毒/艾滋病药物治疗项目中接受HAART治疗的参与者的依从性和艾滋病毒病毒抑制时间的影响。我们对788名初治患者进行了一项回顾性观察研究,这些患者于1997年8月至2000年7月开始接受HAART治疗,并随访至2002年3月31日。门诊药房护理程度根据参与者首次HAART处方的药房配药地点来定义:在艾滋病三级护理医院门诊药房最高,在艾滋病毒/艾滋病药物治疗项目资助的非现场药房中等,在家庭医生办公室最低。Cox比例风险模型检验了药房配药地点对连续两次艾滋病毒病毒抑制时间的独立影响,同时控制其他预后因素,包括医生经验、年龄、性别、注射吸毒、使用含非核苷类逆转录酶抑制剂(NNRTI)与蛋白酶抑制剂(PI)的治疗方案、依从性>90%、基线时艾滋病诊断、基线CD4细胞计数和艾滋病毒病毒载量。抗逆转录病毒药物治疗的中位时间为28个月(四分位间距=14 - 38个月)。有489名(62.1%)参与者从艾滋病三级护理门诊药房获取药物;98名(12.4%)从非现场药房获取,201名(25.5%)从他们的医生办公室获取。与非现场药房和医生办公室相比,在艾滋病三级护理药房接受HAART治疗的患者中,治疗依从性>90%的患者比例更高(分别为70.4%、59.2%和55.7%;p = 0.0001)。在调整其他预后因素后,首次从艾滋病三级护理药房配药的受试者实现艾滋病毒病毒抑制的可能性是从非现场药房和医生办公室获取药物的受试者的1.42倍(置信区间:1.10 - 1.84)。通过增强对HAART的依从性,提供定期门诊药房护理与改善艾滋病毒病毒载量反应独立相关。对于从其他非三级护理药房地点获取艾滋病毒药物的患者,HAART配药的药房实践标准化可能会改善治疗结果。