Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, 600 Highland Ave, Madison, WI, USA.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2012 Feb 23;15(1):10. doi: 10.1186/1758-2652-15-10.
Injection drug users (IDUs) face numerous obstacles to receiving optimal HIV care, and have been shown to underutilize antiretroviral therapy (ART). We sought to estimate the degree to which providers of HIV care defer initiation of ART because of injection drug use and to identify clinic and provider-level factors associated with resistance to prescribing ART to IDUs.
We administered an Internet-based survey to 662 regular prescribers of ART in the United States and Canada. Questionnaire items assessed characteristics of providers' personal demographics and training, site of clinical practice and attitudes about drug use. Respondents then rated whether they would likely prescribe or defer ART for hypothetical patients in a series of scenarios involving varying levels of drug use and HIV disease stage.
Survey responses were received from 43% of providers invited by email and direct mail, and 8.5% of providers invited by direct mail only. Overall, 24.2% of providers reported that they would defer ART for an HIV-infected patient with a CD4+ cell count of 200 cells/mm3 if the patient actively injected drugs, and 52.4% would defer ART if the patient injected daily. Physicians were more likely than non-physician providers to defer ART if a patient injected drugs (adjusted odds ratio 2.6, 95% CI 1.4-4.9). Other predictors of deferring ART for active IDUs were having fewer years of experience in HIV care, regularly caring for fewer than 20 HIV-infected patients, and working at a clinic serving a population with low prevalence of injection drug use. Likelihood of deferring ART was directly proportional to both CD4+ cell count and increased frequency of injecting.
Many providers of HIV care defer initiation of antiretroviral therapy for patients who inject drugs, even in the setting of advanced immunologic suppression. Providers with more experience of treating HIV, those in high injection drug use prevalence areas and non-physician providers may be more willing to prescribe ART despite on-going injection drug use. Because of limitations, including low response rate and use of a convenience sample, these findings may not be generalizable to all HIV care providers in North America.
注射吸毒者(IDUs)在获得最佳 HIV 护理方面面临诸多障碍,并且抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的利用率较低。我们试图评估由于注射吸毒而延迟开始 ART 的提供者的程度,并确定与向 IDUs 开具 ART 处方相关的诊所和提供者水平的因素。
我们向美国和加拿大的 662 名常规 ART 提供者进行了基于互联网的调查。调查问卷评估了提供者个人人口统计学和培训特征、临床实践地点以及对吸毒的态度。然后,受访者根据药物使用和 HIV 疾病阶段的不同,对一系列假设患者的情况下,评估他们是否可能开具或延迟 ART。
通过电子邮件和直邮邀请的提供者中,有 43%的人收到了调查回复,而仅通过直邮邀请的提供者中,有 8.5%的人收到了回复。总体而言,24.2%的提供者报告说,如果 HIV 感染患者的 CD4+细胞计数为 200 个细胞/毫米 3 且患者正在积极注射毒品,他们将延迟 ART 的使用,如果患者每天注射毒品,则有 52.4%的提供者将延迟 ART 的使用。如果患者注射毒品,医生比非医生提供者更有可能延迟 ART(调整后的优势比为 2.6,95%CI 1.4-4.9)。延迟对活跃 IDUs 进行 ART 的其他预测因素包括在 HIV 护理方面的经验较少、定期护理的 HIV 感染患者少于 20 名以及在服务于注射毒品使用率低的人群的诊所工作。延迟 ART 的可能性与 CD4+细胞计数和注射频率的增加成正比。
许多 HIV 护理提供者会延迟为正在注射毒品的患者启动抗逆转录病毒治疗,即使在免疫抑制程度较高的情况下也是如此。有更多治疗 HIV 经验、在注射毒品使用率较高的地区以及非医生提供者的提供者可能更愿意开具 ART,尽管存在持续的注射毒品使用。由于存在限制,包括低响应率和使用方便样本,这些发现可能不适用于北美所有的 HIV 护理提供者。