Pellowski Jennifer A, Kalichman Seth C, Kalichman Moira O, Cherry Chauncey
a Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior , The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University , Providence , RI , USA.
b Department of Psychology , University of Connecticut , Storrs , CT , USA.
AIDS Care. 2016 Aug;28(8):963-70. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2016.1154134. Epub 2016 Mar 10.
Alcohol-antiretroviral therapy (ART) interactive toxicity beliefs reflect perceived adverse outcomes of mixing alcohol and ART. Previous research has shown a significant relationship between alcohol-ART interactive toxicity beliefs and ART non-adherence, over and above other correlates of non-adherence such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)symptoms and frequency of alcohol use. Most past studies have collected data over extended periods and have not determined if alcohol use and missed medications occur at the day-level among people holding interactive toxicity beliefs. Previous daily analyses, however, have been limited by self-reported adherence and relatively short periods of observation. To address these gaps in the literature, men and women living with HIV in Atlanta, GA, were enrolled in a 45-day observational cohort study. Daily alcohol use was collected using two-way interactive text message surveys and daily adherence was collected via the Wisepill device. Fifty-seven participants completed a measure of alcohol-ART interactive toxicity beliefs and contributed 2565 days of daily data. Participants who endorsed high levels of interactive toxicity beliefs had significantly more days when they missed doses of medication. Alcohol-antiretroviral toxicity beliefs predicted missing doses of medication on days when participants were drinking and on days when they were not drinking. Multilevel multivariate regressions showed that these toxicity beliefs predicted daily missed doses of medication over and above quantity of alcohol consumed, depression and general medication concerns. This study replicates and extends previous literature and indicates the necessity of addressing alcohol-ART toxicity beliefs within adherence interventions.
酒精与抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)相互作用的毒性观念反映了人们对酒精与ART混合使用所产生不良后果的认知。先前的研究表明,酒精与ART相互作用的毒性观念与ART治疗的不依从性之间存在显著关联,这种关联超过了其他不依从性的相关因素,如人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)症状和饮酒频率。过去的大多数研究都在较长时间内收集数据,且未确定在持有相互作用毒性观念的人群中,饮酒和漏服药物是否在每日层面发生。然而,以往的每日分析受到自我报告的依从性以及相对较短观察期的限制。为填补文献中的这些空白,佐治亚州亚特兰大市的HIV感染者被纳入一项为期45天的观察性队列研究。通过双向互动短信调查收集每日饮酒情况,通过Wisepill设备收集每日依从性情况。57名参与者完成了一项关于酒精与ART相互作用毒性观念的测量,并提供了2565天的每日数据。认可高水平相互作用毒性观念的参与者漏服药物的天数显著更多。酒精与抗逆转录病毒毒性观念预测,参与者在饮酒日和非饮酒日均会出现漏服药物的情况。多层次多变量回归分析表明,这些毒性观念预测每日漏服药物的情况,超过了酒精摄入量、抑郁和一般用药担忧等因素的影响。本研究重复并扩展了先前的文献,表明在依从性干预中解决酒精与ART毒性观念问题的必要性。