The benefits of HAART rely on continuous lifelong treatment
retention. We used linked population-level health administrative data to
characterize durations of HAART retention and nonretention.
We considered individuals initiating HAART in British
Columbia (1996-2012). An HAART episode was considered discontinued if
individuals had a gap of at least 30 days between days in which medication was
prescribed. We considered durations of HAART retention and nonretention
separately, and used Cox proportional hazards frailty models to identify
demographic and treatment-related factors associated with durations of HAART
retention and nonretention.
Six thousand one hundred fifty-two individuals were included
in the analysis; 81.2% were male, 40.6% were people who inject drugs, and 42.8%
initiated treatment with CD4 cell count less than 200 cells/μl.
- Overall, 29% were continuously retained on HAART through the end of follow-up.
- HAART episodes were a median 6.8 months (25th, 75th percentile: 2.3, 19.5),
- whereas off-HAART episodes lasted a median 1.9 months (1.2, 4.5).
In Cox proportional
hazards frailty models, durations of HAART retention improved over time.
Successive treatment episodes tended to decrease in duration among those with
multiple attempts, whereas off-HAART episodes remained relatively stable.
Younger age, earlier stages of disease progression, and injection drug use were
all associated with shorter durations of HAART retention and longer off-HAART
durations.
Metrics to monitor HAART retention, dropout, and reentry
should be prioritized for HIV surveillance. Clinical strategies and public
health policies are urgently needed to improve HAART retention, particularly
among those at earlier stages of disease progression, the young, and people who
inject drugs.
- 1aBC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS bFaculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University cDivision of AIDS, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
No comments:
Post a Comment