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Risk factors for unstructured treatment interruptions and association with survival in low to middle income countries | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal
Journal Article
|Research

Risk factors for unstructured treatment interruptions and association with survival in low to middle income countries

McMahon J, Spelman T, Ford NP, Greig J, Mesic A, Ssonko C, Casas EDT, O'Brien DP
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Abstract
BACKGROUND
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) treatment interruptions (TIs) lead to poor clinical outcomes with unplanned or unstructured TIs (uTIs) and are likely to be underreported. This study describes uTIs, their risk factors and association with survival.

METHODS
Analysis of ART programmatic data from 11 countries across Asia and Africa between 2003 and 2013 where an uTI was defined as a ≥90-day patient initiated break from ART calculated from the last day the previous ART prescription would have run out until the date of the next ART prescription. Factors predicting uTI were assessed with a conditional risk-set multiple failure time-to-event model to account for repeated events per subject. Association between uTI and mortality was assessed using Cox proportional hazards, with a competing risks extension to test for the influence of lost to follow-up (LTFU).

RESULTS
40,632 patients were included from 11 countries across 33 sites (17 Africa, 16 Asia). Median duration of follow-up was 1.61 years (IQR 0.54–3.31 years), 3386 (8.3 %) patients died, and 3453 (8.5 %) were LTFU. There were 14,817 uTIs, with 10,162 (25 %) patients having more than one uTI. In the adjusted model males were at lower risk of uTI (aHR 0.94, p < 0.01, and age 20–59 was protective compared to <20 years (20–39 years aHR 0.87, p < 0.01; 40–59 years aHR 0.86, p < 0.01). Preserved immune function, as measured by higher CD4 cell count, was associated with a reduced rate of uTI compared to CD4 <200 cells/μL (CD4 200–350 cells/μL aHR 0.89, p < 0.01; CD4 >350 cells/μL aHR 0.87, p < 0.01), whereas advanced clinical disease was associated with increased uTI rate (WHO stage 3 aHR 1.10, p < 0.01; WHO stage 4 aHR 1.21, p < 0.01). There was no relationship between uTI and mortality after adjusting for disease status and considering LTFU as a competing risk.

CONCLUSIONS
uTIs were frequent in people in ART programs in low-middle income countries and associated with younger age, female gender and advanced HIV. uTI did not predict survival when loss to follow-up was considered a competing risk. Further evaluation of uTI predictors and interventions to reduce their occurrence is warranted.

Subject Area

HIV/AIDS

Languages

English
DOI
10.1186/s12981-016-0109-8
Published Date
11 Jul 2016
PubMed ID
27408611
Journal
AIDS Research and Therapy
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 13:25
Issue Date
2016-07-11
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