Remien Robert H, Dolezal Curtis, Wagner Glenn J, Goggin Kathy, Wilson Ira B, Gross Robert, Rosen Marc I, Shen Jie, Simoni Jane M, Golin Carol E, Arnsten Julia H, Bangsberg David R, Liu Honghu
HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies, New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University, 1051 Riverside Drive #15, New York, NY, 10032, USA,
AIDS Behav. 2014 Aug;18(8):1541-7. doi: 10.1007/s10461-013-0656-0.
Non-adherence to safer sex and non-adherence to ART can each have adverse health consequences for HIV-infected individuals and their sex partners, but little is known about the association of these behaviors with each other. This "dual risk" has potential negative public health consequences since non-adherence can lead to the development of resistant virus that can then be transmitted to sex partners. Among participants in the Multi-site Adherence Collaboration in HIV we examined, at study baseline, the association between the frequency of unprotected sex (assessed by self-report) and ART adherence (assessed by Medication Event Monitoring System, Aardex) among the sexually active participants in the five studies (N = 459) that collected sexual risk behavior. The bivariate association between sexual risk behaviors and ART adherence was assessed by Pearson correlations; subsequently regression analyses were used to evaluate the role of demographic characteristics, depression and substance use in explaining the "dual risk" outcome (sexual risk and non-adherence). Among participants who had been sexually active, more unprotected anal/vaginal sex was weakly associated with poorer ART adherence (r = -0.12, p = 0.01 for the overall sample). Further analysis showed this association was driven by the heterosexual men in the sample (r = -0.29, p < 0.001), and was significant only for this group, and not for gay/bisexual men or for women (heterosexual and homosexual). Neither substance use nor depression accounted for the association between sexual risk and ART adherence. HIV-infected heterosexual men who are having difficulty adhering to ART are also more likely to engage in risky sexual behaviors and therefore may benefit from counseling about these risk behaviors. We must identify procedures to screen for these risk behaviors and develop interventions, appropriately tailored to specific populations and identified risk factors, that can be integrated into routine clinical care for people living with HIV. This will become increasingly important in the context of wider access to treatment globally, including new recommendations for ART initiation earlier in a patients' disease course (e.g., "Test and Treat" paradigms).
不坚持安全性行为和不坚持抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)都会对艾滋病毒感染者及其性伴侣产生不良健康后果,但对于这些行为之间的关联却知之甚少。这种“双重风险”具有潜在的负面公共卫生影响,因为不坚持治疗可能导致耐药病毒的产生,进而传播给性伴侣。在我们所研究的多中心艾滋病毒治疗依从性协作项目的参与者中,在研究基线时,我们考察了五项收集了性风险行为数据的研究(N = 459)中,性活跃参与者的无保护性行为频率(通过自我报告评估)与ART依从性(通过药物事件监测系统Aardex评估)之间的关联。通过Pearson相关性分析评估性风险行为与ART依从性之间的双变量关联;随后进行回归分析,以评估人口统计学特征、抑郁和物质使用在解释“双重风险”结果(性风险和不依从)方面的作用。在有性活动的参与者中,更多的无保护肛交/阴道性行为与较差的ART依从性呈弱相关(总体样本中r = -0.12,p = 0.01)。进一步分析表明,这种关联是由样本中的异性恋男性驱动的(r = -0.29, p < 0.001),并且仅在该组中显著,在男同性恋/双性恋男性或女性(异性恋和同性恋)中不显著。物质使用和抑郁都不能解释性风险与ART依从性之间的关联。难以坚持ART治疗的艾滋病毒感染异性恋男性也更有可能从事危险的性行为,因此可能会从关于这些风险行为的咨询中受益。我们必须确定筛查这些风险行为的程序,并制定针对特定人群和已确定风险因素的适当干预措施,这些措施可纳入艾滋病毒感染者的常规临床护理中。在全球范围内更广泛地获得治疗的背景下,包括在患者病程早期开始ART治疗的新建议(例如,“检测并治疗”模式),这将变得越来越重要。