Heestermans Tessa, Browne Joyce L, Aitken Susan C, Vervoort Sigrid C, Klipstein-Grobusch Kerstin
Julius Global Health, Julius Center for Health Sciences and Primary Care, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Ndlovu Research Consortium, Elandsdoorn, South Africa.
BMJ Glob Health. 2016 Dec 30;1(4):e000125. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2016-000125. eCollection 2016.
The rapid scale up of antiretroviral treatment (ART) in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) has resulted in an increased focus on patient adherence. Non-adherence can lead to drug-resistant HIV caused by failure to achieve maximal viral suppression. Optimal treatment requires the identification of patients at high risk of suboptimal adherence and targeted interventions. The aim of this review was to identify and summarise determinants of adherence to ART among HIV-positive adults.
Systematic review of adherence to ART in SSA from January 2002 to October 2014.
A systematic search was performed in 6 databases (PubMed, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Web of Science, Popline, Global Health Library) for qualitative and quantitative articles. Risk of bias was assessed. A meta-analysis was conducted for pooled estimates of effect size on adherence determinants.
Of the 4052 articles screened, 146 were included for final analysis, reporting on determinants of 161 922 HIV patients with an average adherence score of 72.9%. Main determinants of non-adherence were use of alcohol, male gender, use of traditional/herbal medicine, dissatisfaction with healthcare facility and healthcare workers, depression, discrimination and stigmatisation, and poor social support. Promoters of adherence included counselling and education interventions, memory aids, and active disclosure among people living with HIV. Determinants of health status had conflicting influence on adherence.
The sociodemographic, psychosocial, health status, treatment-related and intervention-related determinants are interlinked and contribute to optimal adherence. Clinics providing ART in SSA should therefore design targeted interventions addressing these determinants to optimise health outcomes.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区(SSA)抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的迅速推广使得对患者依从性的关注日益增加。不依从会导致因无法实现最大程度的病毒抑制而产生耐药性HIV。最佳治疗需要识别出依从性欠佳风险较高的患者并进行针对性干预。本综述的目的是识别并总结HIV阳性成年人中ART依从性的决定因素。
对2002年1月至2014年10月期间SSA地区ART依从性进行系统综述。
在6个数据库(PubMed、Cochrane图书馆、EMBASE、科学网、Popline、全球健康图书馆)中进行系统检索,以查找定性和定量文章。评估偏倚风险。对依从性决定因素的效应大小合并估计值进行荟萃分析。
在筛选的4052篇文章中,146篇被纳入最终分析,报告了161922例HIV患者的决定因素,平均依从性得分为72.9%。不依从的主要决定因素包括饮酒、男性、使用传统/草药、对医疗机构和医护人员不满意、抑郁、歧视和污名化以及社会支持不足。依从性的促进因素包括咨询和教育干预、记忆辅助工具以及HIV感染者中的主动披露。健康状况决定因素对依从性的影响相互矛盾。
社会人口学、心理社会、健康状况、治疗相关和干预相关的决定因素相互关联,有助于实现最佳依从性。因此,在SSA地区提供ART的诊所应设计针对性干预措施来解决这些决定因素,以优化健康结果。