Plummer Mary L, Watson-Jones Deborah, Lees Shelley, Baisley Kathy, Matari Salma, Changalucha John, Clayton Tim, Mugeye Kokugonza, Tanton Clare, Weiss Helen A, Ross David A, Hayes Richard J
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
AIDS Care. 2010 Apr;22(4):499-508. doi: 10.1080/09540120903202889.
Poor participant adherence to treatment may contribute to lack of impact in some biomedical HIV prevention trials. This qualitative study explored adherence in a randomized controlled trial of herpes suppressive therapy to reduce HIV acquisition and infectivity among 1305 Tanzanian women. The trial found participants completed 72% of visits on treatment; 52-56% of women on treatment had > or = 90% adherence by pill count estimate; and between six and nine months 30/86 (35%) of urine samples from acyclovir recipients tested acyclovir negative, and 7/86 (8%) from placebo recipients tested acyclovir positive. Twenty in-depth interviews (IDIs) were conducted after 30 months with respondents randomly selected from "acyclovir negative" acyclovir recipients and "acyclovir positive" placebo recipients, or by preliminary pill count adherence categories ("under users," "good users," and "over users"). Almost all respondents reported appropriate adherence and positive trial attitudes, e.g., trusting staff, appreciating services, perceiving pills as beneficial. Fourteen understood placebo use, and six understood the trial purpose. Notably, 5/9 acyclovir recipients and 1/11 placebo recipients believed their pills had treated pre-existing sexually transmitted infections. Limited understanding did not negatively affect reported adherence. Reported adherence problems usually related to illness, travel, and/or family obligations (e.g., husband's disapproval). "Acyclovir positive" placebo recipients denied taking other participants' pills. The IDIs also did not resolve discrepant reports of pill loss or theft. Biomedical HIV interventions often have strong behavioral components that require close attention during intervention development, trial design, and process and impact evaluation. This study identified topics which warrant further consideration, including: information reinforcement and comprehension assessment throughout a trial for long-term participant understanding; involving partners in adherence promotion activities; strategizing with participants to maintain adherence during familial illnesses or other crises; and close monitoring, identification, and follow-up of (1) individuals with discrepant biological tests, and (2) other sources of the treatment in the trial area. Methodological research is also needed to improve adherence measures.
参与者对治疗的依从性差可能导致一些生物医学HIV预防试验缺乏效果。这项定性研究在一项随机对照试验中探讨了依从性,该试验采用疱疹抑制疗法以降低1305名坦桑尼亚妇女感染HIV的几率和传染性。试验发现,参与者完成了72%的治疗访视;通过药丸计数估计,52%至56%接受治疗的妇女依从性≥90%;在六至九个月期间,86名接受阿昔洛韦治疗的参与者中有30份(35%)尿液样本检测阿昔洛韦呈阴性,而86名接受安慰剂治疗的参与者中有7份(8%)检测阿昔洛韦呈阳性。在30个月后,从“阿昔洛韦阴性”的阿昔洛韦接受者、“阿昔洛韦阳性”的安慰剂接受者中,或根据初步药丸计数依从性类别(“用药不足者”、“用药良好者”和“用药过量者”)随机选择受访者进行了20次深入访谈。几乎所有受访者都报告了适当的依从性和对试验的积极态度,例如信任工作人员、赞赏服务、认为药丸有益。14人理解安慰剂的使用,6人理解试验目的。值得注意的是,9名阿昔洛韦接受者中有5名,11名安慰剂接受者中有1名认为他们的药丸治疗了先前存在的性传播感染。理解有限并未对报告的依从性产生负面影响。报告的依从性问题通常与疾病、旅行和/或家庭义务有关(例如丈夫的反对)。“阿昔洛韦阳性”的安慰剂接受者否认服用了其他参与者的药丸。深入访谈也未能解决药丸丢失或被盗的矛盾报告。生物医学HIV干预措施通常具有很强的行为成分,在干预措施制定、试验设计以及过程和效果评估期间需要密切关注。本研究确定了一些值得进一步考虑的主题,包括:在整个试验过程中加强信息并进行理解评估,以促进参与者的长期理解;让伴侣参与依从性促进活动;与参与者制定策略,以便在家庭成员患病或其他危机期间维持依从性;密切监测、识别并跟踪(1)生物检测结果不一致的个体,以及(2)试验地区治疗的其他来源。还需要进行方法学研究以改进依从性测量方法。