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Journal Article
|Research

The effect of complete integration of HIV and TB services on time to initiation of antiretroviral therapy: a before-after study

Kerschberger B, Hilderbrand K, Boulle AM, Coetzee D, Goemaere E, De Avezedo V, van Custem G
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Abstract
BACKGROUND
Studies have shown that early ART initiation in TB/HIV co-infected patients lowers mortality. One way to implement earlier ART commencement could be through integration of TB and HIV services, a more efficient model of care than separate, vertical programs. We present a model of full TB/HIV integration and estimate its effect on time to initiation of ART.

METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS
We retrospectively reviewed TB registers and clinical notes of 209 TB/HIV co-infected adults with a CD4 count <250 cells/µl and registered for TB treatment at one primary care clinic in a South African township between June 2008 and May 2009. Using Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazard analysis, we compared time between initiation of TB treatment and ART for the periods before and after full, "one-stop shop" integration of TB and HIV services (in December 2009). Potential confounders were determined a priori through directed acyclic graphs. Robustness of assumptions was investigated by sensitivity analyses. The analysis included 188 patients (100 pre- and 88 post-integration), yielding 56 person-years of observation. Baseline characteristics of the two groups were similar. Median time to ART initiation decreased from 147 days (95% confidence interval [CI] 85-188) before integration of services to 75 days (95% CI 52-119) post-integration. In adjusted analyses, patients attending the clinic post-integration were 1.60 times (95% CI 1.11-2.29) more likely to have started ART relative to the pre-integration period. Sensitivity analyses supported these findings.

CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE
Full TB/HIV care integration is feasible and led to a 60% increased chance of co-infected patients starting ART, while reducing time to ART initiation by an average of 72 days. Although these estimates should be confirmed through larger studies, they suggest that scale-up of full TB/HIV service integration in high TB/HIV prevalence settings may shorten time to ART initiation, which might reduce excess mortality and morbidity.

Countries

South Africa

Subject Area

tuberculosismodels of care
The effect of complete integration of HIV and TB services on time to initiation of antiretroviral therapy: a before-after study | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal
HIV/AIDS

Languages

English
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0046988
Published Date
05 Oct 2012
PubMed ID
23071690
Journal
PLOS One
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 7, Issue 10, Pages e46988
Issue Date
2012-10-05
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