Delker Erin, Aharonovich Efrat, Hasin Deborah
New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY 10032, United States; San Diego State University/University of California, San Diego Joint Doctoral Program in Public Health (Epidemiology), San Diego, CA 92093, United States.
New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY 10032, United States; Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY 10032, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2016 Apr 1;161:29-35. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2016.01.007. Epub 2016 Jan 21.
Substance use can have major consequences among HIV patients. Interviewer- or self-administered modalities are widely used to measure drug use frequency. This often involves Timeline Follow-Back (TLFB) interviewer-administered measures, or self-administered computerized questions assessing similar information via Audio Computer-Assisted Self Interview (A-CASI). Little is known about agreement between these two modalities on drug use frequency in HIV-infected samples.
Prior to randomization into a trial of brief interventions to reduce drug use, 240 HIV patients completed a baseline A-CASI assessment battery that included questions on drug use frequency, followed by an interviewer-administered TLFB. Each measure generated number of days patients used their primary drug in the prior 30 days. Agreement between TLFB and A-CASI modalities on days using primary drug was determined using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). Regression analysis tested the association of patient characteristics with discrepancies between TLFB and A-CASI modalities.
Overall agreement was excellent (ICC=.80), with little variation by primary drug, education, race, current drug treatment, binge drinking or years since HIV diagnosis. Gender, ethnicity (Hispanic vs. non-Hispanic) and age predicted differences in days used (p<0.05); the A-CASI modality reflected more days used than TLFB.
Measures of days used primary drug showed high agreement whether assessed by interviewer-administered TLFB or by questions self-administered via the A-CASI modality. Differences by gender, ethnicity and age suggest some caution in using the TLFB, although additional studies are needed. However, findings generally indicate that studies based on one assessment method or the other can be compared with reasonable confidence.
药物使用在艾滋病患者中可能会产生重大后果。访谈者施测或自我施测方式被广泛用于测量药物使用频率。这通常涉及时间线追溯法(TLFB)访谈者施测措施,或通过音频计算机辅助自我访谈(A-CASI)自我施测的计算机化问题来评估类似信息。对于这两种方式在艾滋病感染样本中药物使用频率的一致性了解甚少。
在随机分组进入减少药物使用的简短干预试验之前,240名艾滋病患者完成了基线A-CASI评估组套,其中包括关于药物使用频率的问题,随后进行访谈者施测的TLFB。每种测量方法得出患者在过去30天内使用其主要药物的天数。使用组内相关系数(ICC)确定TLFB和A-CASI方式在使用主要药物天数上的一致性。回归分析测试了患者特征与TLFB和A-CASI方式之间差异的关联。
总体一致性非常好(ICC = 0.80),主要药物、教育程度、种族、当前药物治疗、暴饮或自艾滋病诊断以来的年数方面差异不大。性别、族裔(西班牙裔与非西班牙裔)和年龄预测了使用天数的差异(p < 0.05);A-CASI方式反映的使用天数比TLFB更多。
无论通过访谈者施测的TLFB还是通过A-CASI方式自我施测的问题来评估,主要药物使用天数的测量都显示出高度一致性。性别、族裔和年龄的差异表明在使用TLFB时需谨慎,尽管还需要更多研究。然而,研究结果总体表明,基于一种或另一种评估方法的研究可以有合理的信心进行比较。