College of Pharmacy, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2012 Sep;27(9):1159-64. doi: 10.1007/s11606-012-2043-3. Epub 2012 Apr 17.
Racial disparities exist in many aspects of HIV/AIDS. Comorbid depression adds to the complexity of disease management. However, prior research does not clearly show an association between race and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence, or depression and adherence. It is also not known whether the co-existence of depression modifies any racial differences that may exist.
To examine racial differences in ART adherence and whether the presence of comorbid depression moderates these differences among Medicaid-enrolled HIV-infected patients.
Retrospective cohort study.
Multi-state Medicaid database (Thomson Reuters MarketScan®).
Data for 7,034 HIV-infected patients with at least two months of antiretroviral drug claims between 2003 and 2007 were assessed.
Antiretroviral therapy adherence (90 % days covered) were measured for a 12-month period. The main independent variables of interest were race and depression. Other covariates included patient variables, clinical variables (comorbidity and disease severity), and therapy-related variables.
In this study sample, over 66 % of patients were of black race, and almost 50 % experienced depression during the study period. A significantly higher portion of non-black patients were able to achieve optimal adherence (≥90 %) compared to black patients (38.6 % vs. 28.7 %, p < 0.001). In fact, black patients had nearly 30 % decreased odds of being optimally adherent to antiretroviral drugs compared to non-black patients (OR = 0.70, 95 % CI: 0.63-0.78), and was unchanged regard less of whether the patient had depression. Antidepressant treatment nearly doubled the odds of optimal ART adherence among patients with depression (OR = 1.92, 95 % CI: 1.12-3.29).
Black race was significantly associated with worse ART adherence, which was not modified by the presence of depression. Under-diagnosis and under-treatment of depression may hinder ART adherence among HIV-infected patients of all races.
在许多方面,艾滋病毒/艾滋病都存在种族差异。合并抑郁会增加疾病管理的复杂性。然而,先前的研究并未明确表明种族与抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)依从性之间存在关联,也没有表明抑郁与依从性之间存在关联。也不知道抑郁的共存是否会改变可能存在的任何种族差异。
检查接受医疗补助的艾滋病毒感染者中,ART 依从性方面的种族差异,以及合并抑郁是否会改变这些差异。
回顾性队列研究。
多州医疗补助数据库(汤森路透市场扫描®)。
评估了 2003 年至 2007 年间至少有两个月抗逆转录病毒药物用药记录的 7034 名艾滋病毒感染患者的数据。
在 12 个月期间测量了抗逆转录病毒治疗的依从性(90%的天数得到覆盖)。主要的自变量为种族和抑郁。其他协变量包括患者变量、临床变量(合并症和疾病严重程度)和治疗相关变量。
在本研究样本中,超过 66%的患者为黑人,几乎 50%的患者在研究期间患有抑郁。与黑人患者(38.6%)相比,非黑人患者能够达到最佳依从性(≥90%)的比例显著更高(p<0.001)。事实上,与非黑人患者相比,黑人患者对抗逆转录病毒药物达到最佳依从的可能性降低了近 30%(OR=0.70,95%CI:0.63-0.78),且无论患者是否患有抑郁,这一结果都没有改变。抗抑郁药物治疗使患有抑郁的患者达到最佳 ART 依从的可能性增加近一倍(OR=1.92,95%CI:1.12-3.29)。
黑人种族与较差的 ART 依从性显著相关,而抑郁的存在并不能改变这一结果。对所有种族的艾滋病毒感染者,对抑郁的漏诊和治疗不足可能会阻碍 ART 依从性。