Parry Sarah, Zetler Sarah, Kentridge Alice, Petrak Jenny, Barber Tristan
a Homerton University Hospital NHS Trust, Homerton Row, Homerton , London , UK.
AIDS Care. 2017 Oct;29(10):1275-1279. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2017.1300632. Epub 2017 Mar 14.
Routine screening for psychological and cognitive difficulties is recommended in BHIVA guidelines but screening questions are not specified and studies give varied recommendations. Our aim was to see if simple screening in the routine clinic could help better direct our referrals to psychology and highlight those patients requiring, and likely to benefit from, further assessment. We introduced brief questions to assess neurocognitive impairment (NCI) and mood into routine HIV visits, with an onward referral pathway for further investigation for those screening positive. Routine attendees to HIV outpatient care over 12 weeks completed brief screening for depression (PHQ-2) and anxiety (GAD-2) and answered three short questions to screen for possible neurocognitive impairment (NCI-3Q). Patients screening positive underwent further screening via our psychologists and/or referral for neuropsychometric testing. Patient demographics, HIV markers and treatment history were recorded. 97 HIV outpatients were screened; 44 (45%) initially screened positive for NCI and/or mood. 29/44 (66%) were referred for further screening and/or psychological assessment and 21/29 (72%) of those engaged. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and International HIV Dementia Scale (IHDS) were conducted on seven patients; four of these received full neuropsychometric testing. A detectable viral load was associated with positive neurocognitive screening. Rates of NCI and mood disorder among those who were tested were consistent with previous studies. The PHQ-2 and GAD-2 did detect mood problems; however, our results suggest the NCI-3Q questions alone are not good at detecting those with possible NCI. Screening for NCI remains practically difficult in the routine outpatient setting and this pilot supports the need for clearer guidelines on detecting HIV related NCI.
英国HIV协会(BHIVA)指南建议对心理和认知障碍进行常规筛查,但未明确筛查问题,且不同研究给出了不同的建议。我们的目的是探究在常规门诊进行简单筛查是否有助于更好地指导我们将患者转诊至心理科,并找出那些需要进一步评估且可能从中受益的患者。我们在常规HIV门诊就诊时引入了简短问题,以评估神经认知障碍(NCI)和情绪状况,并为筛查呈阳性的患者建立了进一步检查的转诊途径。在12周内定期到HIV门诊就诊的患者完成了抑郁症(PHQ-2)和焦虑症(GAD-2)的简短筛查,并回答了三个简短问题以筛查可能的神经认知障碍(NCI-3Q)。筛查呈阳性的患者通过我们的心理医生进行进一步筛查和/或转诊进行神经心理测试。记录了患者的人口统计学信息、HIV标志物和治疗史。对97名HIV门诊患者进行了筛查;44名(45%)最初筛查出NCI和/或情绪呈阳性。其中29/44名(66%)被转诊进行进一步筛查和/或心理评估,其中21/29名(72%)接受了评估。对7名患者进行了蒙特利尔认知评估(MoCA)和国际HIV痴呆量表(IHDS)测试;其中4名接受了全面的神经心理测试。可检测到的病毒载量与神经认知筛查呈阳性相关。接受测试者中NCI和情绪障碍的发生率与先前研究一致。PHQ-2和GAD-2确实检测出了情绪问题;然而,我们的结果表明,仅靠NCI-3Q问题并不擅长检测可能患有NCI的患者。在常规门诊环境中筛查NCI实际上仍然很困难,这项试点研究支持需要更明确的检测HIV相关NCI的指南。