Langebeek Nienke, Gisolf Elizabeth H, Reiss Peter, Vervoort Sigrid C, Hafsteinsdóttir Thóra B, Richter Clemens, Sprangers Mirjam A G, Nieuwkerk Pythia T
Department of Medical Psychology, Academic Medical Center, Meibergdreef 9, Amsterdam 1105, AZ, Netherlands.
BMC Med. 2014 Aug 21;12:142. doi: 10.1186/PREACCEPT-1453408941291432.
Adherence to combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) is a key predictor of the success of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) treatment, and is potentially amenable to intervention. Insight into predictors or correlates of non-adherence to ART may help guide targets for the development of adherence-enhancing interventions. Our objective was to review evidence on predictors/correlates of adherence to ART, and to aggregate findings into quantitative estimates of their impact on adherence.
We searched PubMed for original English-language papers, published between 1996 and June 2014, and the reference lists of all relevant articles found. Studies reporting on predictors/correlates of adherence of adults prescribed ART for chronic HIV infection were included without restriction to adherence assessment method, study design or geographical location. Two researchers independently extracted the data from the same papers. Random effects models with inverse variance weights were used to aggregate findings into pooled effects estimates with 95% confidence intervals. The standardized mean difference (SMD) was used as the common effect size. The impact of study design features (adherence assessment method, study design, and the United Nations Human Development Index (HDI) of the country in which the study was set) was investigated using categorical mixed effects meta-regression.
In total, 207 studies were included. The following predictors/correlates were most strongly associated with adherence: adherence self-efficacy (SMD = 0.603, P = 0.001), current substance use (SMD = -0.395, P = 0.001), concerns about ART (SMD = -0.388, P = 0.001), beliefs about the necessity/utility of ART (SMD = 0.357, P = 0.001), trust/satisfaction with the HIV care provider (SMD = 0.377, P = 0.001), depressive symptoms (SMD = -0.305, P = 0.001), stigma about HIV (SMD = -0.282, P = 0.001), and social support (SMD = 0.237, P = 0.001). Smaller but significant associations were observed for the following being prescribed a protease inhibitor-containing regimen (SMD = -0.196, P = 0.001), daily dosing frequency (SMD = -0.193, P = 0.001), financial constraints (SMD -0.187, P = 0.001) and pill burden (SMD = -0.124, P = 0.001). Higher trust/satisfaction with the HIV care provider, a lower daily dosing frequency, and fewer depressive symptoms were more strongly related with higher adherence in low and medium HDI countries than in high HDI countries.
These findings suggest that adherence-enhancing interventions should particularly target psychological factors such as self-efficacy and concerns/beliefs about the efficacy and safety of ART. Moreover, these findings suggest that simplification of regimens might have smaller but significant effects.
坚持联合抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)是人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)治疗成功的关键预测因素,并且有可能进行干预。深入了解ART治疗不依从的预测因素或相关因素可能有助于指导增强依从性干预措施的开发目标。我们的目的是回顾关于ART依从性的预测因素/相关因素的证据,并将研究结果汇总为对依从性影响的定量估计。
我们检索了PubMed中1996年至2014年6月发表的英文原创论文以及所有相关文章的参考文献列表。纳入报告慢性HIV感染成人ART依从性预测因素/相关因素的研究,不限依从性评估方法、研究设计或地理位置。两名研究人员独立从同一篇论文中提取数据。采用具有逆方差权重的随机效应模型将研究结果汇总为具有95%置信区间的合并效应估计值。标准化均数差(SMD)用作共同效应量。使用分类混合效应元回归研究研究设计特征(依从性评估方法、研究设计以及开展研究国家的联合国人类发展指数(HDI))的影响。
总共纳入207项研究。以下预测因素/相关因素与依从性最密切相关:依从性自我效能感(SMD = 0.603,P = 0.001)、当前物质使用情况(SMD = -0.395,P = 0.001)、对ART的担忧(SMD = -0.388,P = 0.001)、对ART必要性/效用的信念(SMD = 0.357,P = 0.001)、对HIV护理提供者的信任/满意度(SMD = 0.377,P = 0.001)、抑郁症状(SMD = -0.305,P = 0.001)、对HIV的耻辱感(SMD = -0.282,P = 0.001)以及社会支持(SMD = 0.237,P = 0.001)。对于以下因素观察到较小但显著的关联:采用含蛋白酶抑制剂方案(SMD = -0.196,P = 0.001)、每日给药频率(SMD = -0.193,P = 0.001)、经济限制(SMD = -0.187,P = 0.001)和药片负担(SMD = -0.124,P = 0.001)。与高HDI国家相比,在中低HDI国家,对HIV护理提供者更高的信任/满意度、更低的每日给药频率以及更少的抑郁症状与更高的依从性更密切相关。
这些发现表明,增强依从性的干预措施应特别针对心理因素,如自我效能感以及对ART疗效和安全性的担忧/信念。此外,这些发现表明方案简化可能具有较小但显著的效果。