Dombrowski Julia C, Bove Joanna, Roscoe James C, Harvill Jessica, Firth Caislin L, Khormooji Shireen, Carr Jason, Choi Peter, Smith Courtney, Schafer Sean D, Golden Matthew R
*University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; †Public Health-Seattle & King County, Seattle, Washington; ‡HIV Services, Family Medicine Residency of Idaho, Boise, Idaho; §Alaska Department of Health and Social Services, Anchorage, Alaska; ‖Oregon Health Authority, Salem, Oregon; ¶Multnomah County Health Department, Portland, Oregon; #Washington State Department of Health, Olympia, Washington; **Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, Helena, Montana; and ††Wyoming Department of Health, Cheyenne, Wyoming.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2017 Feb 1;74 Suppl 2(Suppl 2):S81-S87. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000001237.
HIV care continuum estimates derived from laboratory surveillance typically assume that persons without recently reported CD4 count or viral load results are out of care.
We conducted a multistate project (Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming) to ascertain the status of HIV cases that appeared to be out of care during a 12-month period. We used laboratory surveillance to identify cases in all states but Idaho, where viral load reporting is not mandatory, requiring us to rely on clinic records. After complete investigation, we assigned each case one of the following dispositions: moved out of state, died, in HIV care, no evidence of HIV care, or data error.
We identified 3866 cases with no CD4 count or viral load result in a ≥12-month period during 2012-2014, most (85%) of which were in Washington or Oregon. A median of 43% (range: 20%-67%) of cases investigated in each state had moved, 9% (0%-16%) had died, and 11% (8%-33%) were in care during the 12-month surveillance period. Only 28% of investigated cases in the region and a median of 30% (10%-57%) of investigated cases in each state had no evidence of care, migration, or death after investigation.
Most persons living with HIV in the Northwest United States who appear to be out of care based on laboratory surveillance are not truly out of care. Our findings highlight the importance of improving state surveillance systems to ensure accurate care continuum estimates and guide Data to Care efforts.
从实验室监测得出的HIV治疗连续情况估计通常假定,最近未报告CD4细胞计数或病毒载量结果的人不再接受治疗。
我们开展了一个多州项目(阿拉斯加、爱达荷、蒙大拿、俄勒冈、华盛顿和怀俄明),以确定在12个月期间看似不再接受治疗的HIV病例的状况。我们利用实验室监测来识别除爱达荷州以外所有州的病例,在爱达荷州病毒载量报告并非强制要求,这使我们不得不依赖诊所记录。在完成调查后,我们为每个病例指定以下处置情况之一:搬离该州、死亡、接受HIV治疗、无HIV治疗证据或数据错误。
在2012 - 2014年的≥12个月期间,我们识别出3866例没有CD4细胞计数或病毒载量结果的病例,其中大多数(85%)在华盛顿或俄勒冈。在每个州接受调查的病例中,中位数为43%(范围:20% - 67%)已搬离,9%(0% - 16%)已死亡,11%(8% - 33%)在12个月监测期内接受治疗。在该地区,只有28%接受调查的病例以及在每个州接受调查病例的中位数为30%(10% - 57%)在调查后没有治疗、迁移或死亡的证据。
在美国西北部,根据实验室监测看似不再接受治疗的大多数HIV感染者并非真的不再接受治疗。我们的研究结果凸显了改进州监测系统以确保准确的治疗连续情况估计并指导“数据促治疗”工作的重要性。