Clinical Research Unit, Department of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2010 Jul 22;10:430. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-430.
Many national antiretroviral therapy (ART) programmes encourage providers to identify and address baseline factors associated with poor treatment outcomes, including modifiable adherence-related behaviours, before initiating ART. However, evidence on such predictors is scarce, and providers judgement may often be inaccurate. To help address this evidence gap, this observational cohort study examined baseline factors potentially predictive of poor treatment outcomes in two ART programmes in South Africa, with a particular focus on determinants of adherence.
Treatment-naïve patients starting ART were enrolled from a community and a workplace ART programme. Potential baseline predictors associated with poor treatment outcomes (defined as viral load > 400 copies/ml or having discontinued treatment by six months) were assessed using logistic regression. Exposure variables were organised for regression analysis using a hierarchical framework.
38/227 (17%) of participants in the community had poor treatment outcomes compared to 47/117 (40%) in the workplace. In the community, predictors of worse outcomes included: drinking more than 20 units of alcohol per week, having no prior experience of chronic medications, and consulting a traditional healer in the past year (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 15.36, 95% CI 3.22-73.27; aOR 2.30, 95%CI 1.00-5.30; aOR 2.27, 95% CI 1.00-5.19 respectively). Being male and knowing someone on ART were associated with better outcomes (aOR 0.25, 95%CI 0.09-0.74; aOR 0.44, 95%CI 0.19-1.01 respectively). In the workplace, predictors of poor treatment outcomes included being uncertain about the health effects of ART and a traditional healer's ability to treat HIV (aOR 7.53, 95%CI 2.02-27.98; aOR 4.40, 95%CI 1.41-13.75 respectively). Longer pre-ART waiting time (2-12 weeks compared to <2 weeks) predicted better treatment outcomes (aOR 0.13, 95% CI 0.03-0.56).
Baseline predictors of poor treatment outcomes were largely unique to each programme, likely reflecting different populations and pathways to HIV care. In the workplace, active promotion of HIV testing may have extended ART to individuals who, without provider initiation, would not have spontaneously sought care. As provider-initiated testing makes ART available to individuals less motivated to seek care, patients may need additional adherence support, especially addressing uncertainty about the health benefits of ART.
许多国家的抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)方案鼓励提供者在开始 ART 之前,识别和解决与治疗效果不佳相关的基线因素,包括可改变的依从性相关行为。然而,关于这些预测因素的证据很少,提供者的判断往往不准确。为了帮助解决这一证据差距,本观察性队列研究在南非的两个 ART 项目中研究了与治疗效果不佳相关的基线因素,特别关注依从性的决定因素。
从社区和工作场所的 ART 项目中招募开始接受 ART 的初治患者。使用逻辑回归评估与不良治疗结局(定义为病毒载量>400 拷贝/ml 或在 6 个月内停止治疗)相关的潜在基线预测因素。使用分层框架组织暴露变量进行回归分析。
与工作场所的 47 名(40%)相比,社区中有 38 名(17%)参与者的治疗结果不佳。在社区中,较差结局的预测因素包括:每周饮酒超过 20 单位、无慢性药物治疗经验以及过去一年咨询传统治疗师(调整后的优势比[aOR]15.36,95%CI 3.22-73.27;aOR 2.30,95%CI 1.00-5.30;aOR 2.27,95%CI 1.00-5.19)。男性和认识正在接受 ART 治疗的人是更好结局的预测因素(aOR 0.25,95%CI 0.09-0.74;aOR 0.44,95%CI 0.19-1.01)。在工作场所,较差治疗结局的预测因素包括对 ART 的健康影响和传统治疗师治疗 HIV 的能力不确定(aOR 7.53,95%CI 2.02-27.98;aOR 4.40,95%CI 1.41-13.75)。较长的 ART 前等待时间(2-12 周与<2 周)预测更好的治疗结局(aOR 0.13,95%CI 0.03-0.56)。
不良治疗结局的基线预测因素在很大程度上每个项目都是独特的,可能反映了不同的人群和 HIV 护理途径。在工作场所,积极推广 HIV 检测可能将 ART 扩展到那些没有提供者启动、不会自发寻求护理的人群。由于提供者启动的检测使那些不太愿意寻求护理的人能够获得 ART,因此患者可能需要额外的依从性支持,特别是要解决对 ART 健康益处的不确定性。