| Literature DB >> 22536064 |
Parya Saberi1, Betty J Dong, Mallory O Johnson, Ruth M Greenblatt, Jennifer M Cocohoba.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Due to the rapid proliferation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) treatment options, there is a need for health care providers with knowledge of antiretroviral therapy intricacies. In a HIV multidisciplinary care team, the HIV pharmacist is well-equipped to provide this expertise. We conducted a systematic review to assess the impact of HIV pharmacists on HIV clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: HIV/AIDS; adherence; clinical; impact; pharmacist
Year: 2012 PMID: 22536064 PMCID: PMC3333818 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S30244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Example of search strategy used in PubMed
| Search # | PubMed search terms |
|---|---|
| #7 | Search #5 AND #6 |
| #6 | Search randomized controlled trial[pt] OR controlled clinical trial[pt] OR randomized controlled trials[mh] OR random allocation[mh] OR double-blind method[mh] OR single-blind method[mh] OR clinical trial[pt] OR clinical trials[mh] OR “clinical trial”[tw] OR ((singl*[tw] OR doubl*[tw] OR trebl*[tw] OR tripl*[tw]) AND (mask*[tw] OR blind*[tw])) OR Placebos[mh] OR placebo*[tw] OR random*[tw] OR nonrandomi*[tw] OR before after study[tw] OR time series[tw] OR “case control”[tw] OR prospective*[tw] OR retrospective*[tw] OR cohort[tw] OR cross-section*[tw] OR research design[mh:noexp] OR comparative study[pt] OR evaluation studies[pt] OR follow-up studies[mh] OR prospective studies[mh] OR controlled[tw] OR control[tw] OR volunteer*[tw] OR longitud*[tw] OR descripti*[tiab] OR study[tiab] OR evaluat*[tiab] OR “odds ratio”[tw] OR “hazard ratio”[tw] OR “relative risk”[tw] OR “risk ratio”[tw] OR AOR[tiab] OR RRR[tiab] OR NNT[tiab] OR design*[tiab] |
| #5 | Search #1 AND #2 AND #3 AND #4 |
| #4 | Search HAART[tiab] OR ART[tiab] OR ARV[tiab] OR ARVs[tiab] OR anti-retroviral*[tiab] OR antiretroviral*[tiab] OR “antiviral”[tiab] OR antiviral[tiab] OR “anti-HIV” OR antiHIV OR “Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active”[mh] OR “Anti-Retroviral Agents”[mh] OR CD4[tw] OR immune[tw] OR immunolo*[tw] OR immunology[sh] OR lymphocyte[tw] OR CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes[mh] OR CD4 Lymphocyte Count[mh] OR CD4 count* OR “viral load”[tw] OR virol*[tw] OR viral[tw] OR virology[sh] OR outcome OR outcomes OR prognosis OR “outcome and process assessment(health care)”[mh] OR th[sh:noexp] OR dt[sh] OR effective*[tw] |
| #3 | Search adhere*[tiab] OR complian*[tiab] OR adhere*[tw] OR complian*[tw] OR Patient Compliance[mh] OR Medication Adherence[mh] OR Counseling[mh] OR counsel*[tw] OR education[tw] OR monitor*[tw] OR interven*[tw] OR self administration[mh] |
| #2 | Search pharmacist*[tiab] OR PharmD[tiab] OR “Pharm D”[tiab] OR pharmacy[tiab] OR pharmacies[tiab] OR pharmacists[mh] OR pharmacy[mh] OR community pharmacy services[mh] OR medication therapy management[mh] OR pharmacy service, hospital[mh] OR pharmaceutical services[mh:noexp] |
| #1 | Search HIV Infections[mh] OR HIV[mh] OR HIV[tiab] OR HIV-1[tiab] OR HIV-2[tiab] OR HIV-1[tiab] OR HIV-2[tiab] OR HIV infect*[tiab] OR human immunodeficiency virus[tiab] OR human immune deficiency virus[tiab] OR human immuno-deficiency virus[tiab] OR ((human immun*) AND (deficiency virus[tiab])) OR acquired immunodeficiency syndrome[tiab] OR acquired immune deficiency syndrome[tiab] OR acquired immuno-deficiency syndrome[tiab] OR ((acquired immun*) AND (deficiency syndrome[tiab])) OR HIV/AIDS[tiab] OR “HIV AIDS”[tiab] OR “Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Viral”[mh] |
Figure 1Selection process for study inclusion.
Summary of studies with primary outcomes
| Source | Country, City (State) | Study design and objectives | If examined interventions, description of intervention | Inclusion/exclusion criteria | Description of pharmacist’s role | Outcomes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| |||||||||
| Method of ARV adherence assessment | HIV viral load (copies/mL) | CD4+ cell count (cells/mm3) | Other outcomes | ||||||
| Ostrop | Canada, Alberta | Cohort study to examine ARV adherence and duration of therapy via tool usage (computer generated individualized schedule, pill box, and electronic reminder device) | Received medication and adherence counseling, monitoring, medication interventions, introduction to adherence tools. Provided individualized schedules, pill boxes, and pagers | Replied to questionnaire ≥1 time, ≥18 years, starting ≥1 new ARV. Exclude: not responsible for taking own medications, enrolled in other research, unable to complete questionnaire | Created computer-generated schedules in collaboration with patient (taking account patient needs and regimen requirement). Programmed electronic reminders using beepers | Refill | NR | NR | Tool usage: 61% used a tool at 6 and 12 months. Schedules used by 48%, pill box by 20%, pagers by 8%. ARV persistence: 74% remained on ARVs at 12 months |
| McPherson-Baker | USA, Miami (FL) | Controlled before-after study to test efficacy of brief medication counseling and behavioral intervention in improving ARV adherence | Intervention: Monthly pharmacist visits x5; given pill box and adherence counseling; instructed on how to fill pill box. Control: usual care including only pharmacy overview of medications but no pill boxes. Matched on age, CD4+, risk factor, ethnicity | Nonadherent (failure to refill ARVs and OI medications or hospitalization for OI); function independently. Exclude: Karnofsky <60, has primary caregiver, living in facility, mental disability, history of clinic loss to follow-up | Educated patient on basic HIV information, impact of HIV on body, purpose of ARVs, clarification of regimen and potential toxicity. Gave pill box and taught how to fill it. At follow- up visits reviewed regimen, adherence barriers, AEs, and gave positive reinforcement Role: Central | Refill | Mean VL from baseline to 5 months post-intervention: Intervention: 99, 213 to 81,600 c/mL. Control: 142,848 to 119,275 c/mL | Mean CD4+ from baseline to 5 months post-intervention: | Significant increase in adherence to clinic appointments |
| Mathews | USA, San Diego (CA) | Cohort study to assess prevalence and predictors of early ARV adherence using multiple indicators and to estimate effects of early adherence on subsequent VL and CD4+ | Patients referred to ARV monitoring clinic for therapy initiation or change. Conducted baseline interview then 30 days of EDM, interview at 30 days, and VL monitoring | Consenting HIV+ adults, receiving care at study clinic, referred to ARV monitoring clinic for treatment initiation or change, candidates for VL suppression to <400 c/mL | Selected regimen after PCP consult and review of prior ARV history, drug interactions, contraindications, patient preferences. Provided adherence counseling. Estimated average duration of therapeutic drug levels following dosing events | EDM and self-report Adherence predictors: male, nonBlack, ARV naïve, fewer urgent appointments, no substance use, prior adherence, health beliefs, pharmacist prediction of high adherence, number of ARVs in regimen, high ARV knowledge, low ARV pessimism | Mean change in VL from baseline to 6 months inferior in EDM noncompleters (0.5 log10 change) vs completers (1.7 log10 change) | Predictors of CD4+ response were baseline CD4+ and prior ARV experience | EDM noncompletion was risk factor for worse VL and CD4+ outcomes |
| Smith | USA, Chapel Hill (NC) | RCT to examine whether a self-management intervention based on feedback of adherence and principles of social-cognitive theory improves adherence |
Self-management program: based on information exchange, skills development, enlisting social support. 3 monthly follow-ups with RN or pharmacist. Usual care: Medication counseling and EDM, but no study follow-ups | ≥18 years, give informed consent, starting new ARV regimen including a PI or change to a new PI-containing regimen | Educated on ARVs (ADRs, dosing, storage, interactions; gave medication grid, how to improve adherence, self-management and skills training. Gave diary to track nonadherence and events fostering it. Discussed diary notes and gave feedback by EDM outputs Role: Peripheral | EDM | At least one VL < 400 c/mL (as-treated analysis): A = 64%; B = 38%. At least one VL < 400 c/mL (ITT analysis): A = 41%; B = 24% | NR | Adherence self-efficacy: not significant for between-or within-subject effect according to treatment group |
| Castillo | Canada, Vancouver | Cohort study to compare impact of differing levels of HIV-pharmacy care on adherence and time to VL suppression (time from initiating ARVs to VL < 500 x2) | – | ≥18 years, treatment naïve when starting 2 NRTIs + PI or 2 NRTIs + NNRTI between August 1997–July 2000 |
AIDS-tertiary care hospital outpatient pharmacies (n = 2): pharmacists provided medication counseling, individualized regimens, monitored for AEs. Patients seen every 2 months Off-site pharmacies (n = 4): various levels of funding to provide HIV pharmacy care. Family physicians’ offices (n = 123): No pharmacist contact at ARV dispensing Role: Central | Refill | Highest likelihood of suppression at 12 months in A (75%) vs B (59%) and C (60%) ( | NR | – |
| Levy | Australia, Melbourne | Quasi RCT to determine the impact of an adherence education intervention on adherence | General education: on HIV and importance of adherence by pharmacist or RN. Individual session: pharmacist examined lifestyle and barriers; patient given medication planner, adherence devices, pharmacist pager number | ≥18 years, written consent, ARVs from the clinic. Exclude: those planning to interrupt treatment, changing ARVs within next 3 months, 100% adherent, or VL undetectable | Educated on HIV and adherence; examined patient lifestyle (eg, sleep, diet, work, etc); integrated medicines into patient’s life; gave medication planner and adherence devices (eg, pill boxes, alarms), and pager number | Self-report | Mean VL: Pre = 21,801 c/mL; Post = 17,587 c/mL ( | Mean CD4+ cell count: Pre = 382; Post = 406 ( | – |
| Gross | USA, Philadelphia (PA) | Cohort study to determine if different refill mechanisms (ie, monthly pick-up at pharmacy, monthly mail order, or pharmacist-dispensed pill organizers) every 2 weeks were associated with differences in ARV refill adherence | – | Veteran’s administration patient, computerized records available, on stable ARV regimen >3 months |
Biweekly pharmacist-dispensed pill organizers: If patient missed pick up, pharmacist called to encourage pick up. Monthly pharmacy pick up: Patients picked up ARVs. If unclaimed medications, pharmacist called patient. Monthly mail order: If unclaimed ARVs, pharmacist called patient. Role: Peripheral | Refill | NR | NR | – |
| Rathbun | USA, Oklahoma City (OK) | RCT to examine the impact of a pharmacist operated adherence clinic on adherence to HAART and viral suppression |
Pharmacist adherence clinic: 1–1.5 hour visit at start of ARV; phone follow-up in 1 week; 30 minute follow-up after 2 weeks to assess AEs. Additional follow-up through week 12 if needing assistance. Standard of care: education during PCP office visits | Treatment naïve or experienced initiating >3 ARVs. Excluded: once-daily regimens, 3 NRTI regimen, salvage (resistance to >2 ARVs in regimen), in clinical trial, already followed in adherence clinic | Educated about ARV, food requirements, and AE management; monitored patient progress; used visual aids and reminder devices | EDM, self-report | Proportion with VL < 400 at week 16: A = 100%; B = 71% ( | Median increase in CD4+ (CD4+%) from baseline: A = 142 (5%); B = 97 (4%) | – |
| Frick | USA, Seattle (WA) | Historically controlled trial to compare duration on ARVs, clinical indicators, and adherence between HIV+ patients in a multidisciplinary program (A) vs historical controls (B) from 6 months before initiation of HAART protocol) | – | HAART protocol: ≥18 years, treatment naïve, starting 1st HAART with PI or NNRTI, referred to protocol, filled 1st ARV within 365 days of starting protocol. Historical control: start 1st HAART 6 months prior to study start |
HAART protocol: 1-on-1 appointments with pharmacist, dietician, social worker. Pharmacist educated on AEs and self-management. Corrected drug interactions, gave medication schedule, discussed adherence, identified psychosocial barriers. Historical control: no HAART protocol Role: Peripheral | Refill | If stopped HAART before 12 months- Mean log10 VL change: A = −1.98; B = −1.60 ( | If stopped HAART before 12 months- Mean CD4+ change: A = 132; B = 157 ( | Time on HAART: A > 360 days; B = 210 days ( |
| Visnegarwala | USA, Houston (TX) | Historically controlled study to compare VL from Directly Delivered Therapy (DDT) vs Adherence Coordination Services (ACS) vs Standard of Care (SOC) during intervention (at 4–8 months) vs post intervention (at 10–14 months) |
DDT: ARV delivery in bubble packs for 6 months (4/03–9/2003). ACS: Health care team with manager/nurse educator, social worker/addictions counselor, HIV+ peer caseworker, pharmacist (9/01–3/2002). SOC: Historical controls (9/99–8/2001). PCP provided education | ARV naïve women, entering care and off ARVs for >2 years, restarting treatment with ≥2 new ARVs | ACS: Pharmacist made reminder calls for pharmacy refills and clinic appointments | Self-report (DDT and ACS); pill count by empty bubble pack (DDT) | VL < 400 during intervention: A = 85%; B = 54%; C = 36% (OR = 1.6; | CD4+ change during intervention: A = 19; B = 262; C = 115 ( | Appointment keeping: A = 76%; B = 75%; C = 54%. Cost: A = $347 per person per month; B = $667 per person per month |
| March | USA, Los Angeles (CA) | Before-after study to evaluate the impact of HIV drug optimization clinic (DOC) pharmacists’ interventions on VL and CD4+, rate of ADR, patients’ perception of own health status | PCPs referral if ARV nonadherence, ADRs, drug interactions, drug-resistant virus. Follow-up for 12 weeks or until discharged | ≥18 years, gave informed consent. Exclude: participation in other study that limited pharmacist activities at DOC | Pharmacist highly trained in HIV pharmacotherapy. Educated patient, added or discontinued medication, adjusted dosage due to renal/hepatic impairment or interaction, interpreted resistance tests, devised best-fit regimens that minimized insult to other diagnoses | – | Mean VL decrease during study period = 1.02 log10 c/mL ( | Mean CD4+ increase over study period = 54 ( | 253 interventions: 53% HIV related; 47% primary care related; 100% accepted by physician. 45% patient education; 20% addition of medication; 20% dosage adjustment; 10% medication discontinuation; 4% resistance test results. ARV toxicity score decrease = 1 ( |
| Horberg | USA, Northern CA | Ecological study to assess the association of clinical pharmacists with health outcomes (CD4+, VL, adherence) and utilization measures (number of hospital days, ED visits, office visits) among HIV+ patients | – | ≥18 year, initiating HAART with no prior record of ARVs, ≥12 months of health plan membership prior to ARVs, used KP pharmacy for filling medications |
Medical centers with HIV pharmacist: provided consultative visits at ARV initiation and at every regimen change. Conducted regimen counseling, adverse effects management, arranging appointments, and case management. Medical centers without HIV pharmacist: case managers or HIV provider expected to perform above duties Role: Central | Refill | OR of VL < 500: at 12 months = 2.06 ( | Difference in CD4 in A vs B at HAART: initiation = 22 ( | Change in office visits RR at 24 months = 0.95 ( |
| Hirsch | USA, 10 cities (CA) | Cohort study to examine 1st year of HIV/AIDS pharmacy MTM program by comparing patient characteristics; ARV regimens, adherence, excess fills, contraindicated regimens, OI occurrence; pharmacy and medical costs in pilot (A) vs nonpilot (B) pharmacies | Participation in pilot Medi-Cal program (pharmacies providing MTM services for HIV+ patients by participating in the special CA Department of Health Care Services program). Pharmacies had to have >90% HIV+ patients, ability to provide specialized HIV services, identify patients who should receive MTM services | HIV+, Medi-Cal beneficiary, ≥18 years, enrolled 1/2004–12/2005, at least 1 ARV and 1 medical claim with HIV diagnosis in 2004 and intervention periods (2005).
Pilot pharmacy: filled ≥50% of ARVs in 2005 at pilot pharmacy. Nonpilot pharmacy: filled ARVs at any pharmacy | Counseled and evaluated adherence, consulted with providers, managed ADR, tailored regimen to fit patient’s lifestyle or needs, discussed therapy, offered adherence packaging (eg, blister packs), offered refill reminders and weekly phone calls or home visits after ARV initiation, identified peer advocates, counseled when ARV under-or over-use detected Role: Peripheral | Refill | NR | NR | Cost: Mean annual cost per patient was 10% higher in A vs B ( |
| Pirkle | Burkina Faso, Ouagadougou and Mali, Bamako | Before-after comparison to explore whether measuring VL plus mDAART (1–2 doses/day is witnessed) can be used in resource limited settings for nonadherent individuals | 1 month of mDAART with weekly visits with pharmacist or adherence counselors. Intervention done by family, friend, or health care professional chosen by patient | Treatment experienced, on ARVs for 6 months before study, VL > 500 c/mL, agree to intervention | NR | Self-report | VL decreased by at least 1 log10 in 1/3 of mDAART group but no decrease noted in remaining 2/3 (baseline log10 VL = 4.18 log10 c/mL) | NR | 54% of mDAART group had major drug resistance before study entry |
| Krummenacher | Switzerland, Lausanne and Basel | Nonrandomized controlled pilot study to evaluate the feasibility of an interdisciplinary program for enhancing adherence to first and second line ARVs |
Intervention: Pharmacy visit at 0, 4, 8, 12, 24 weeks. Phone call at week 18 if needed more support. EDM given. Counseling: cognitive intervention; motivational intervention; behavioral intervention. Adherence report given to physician. Control: Enhanced usual care (EDM minus MI) | ≥18 years, spoke French or German, outpatients started 1st or 2nd line ARV regimen within last 4 weeks or inpatients started 1st or 2nd line ARV regimen in hospital and were at point of discharge from hospital | Educated on nonadherence management and MI. Pharmacist technicians trained on how to handle EDMs | EDM | NR | NR | Study successfully conducted in Lausanne but Basel recruitment was stopped due to unsuccessful recruitment |
| Ma | USA, Vallejo (CA) | Before-after comparison to investigate the changes in HIV clinical outcomes, ARV regimen complexity, and ARV adherence, 6 months before and after the clinical care activities of an HIV clinical pharmacist | – | HIV+, received pharmacist-recommended ARV modification. Exclude: not using KP pharmacies for refills, newly starting ARVs during study period | Reviewed ARV history, resistance tests, medication intolerance, comorbidities, drug interactions, laboratory abnormalities, etc, for ARV modification to treat HIV while simplifying regimens to improve adherence. Counseled on adherence and monitored progress | Refill | % undetectable: Pre = 63%; Post = 96% ( | Absolute CD4+: Pre = 462; At = 423; Post = 491 ( | Mean pill burden (pills/day): Pre = 7.2 ± 3.9; Post = 5.4 ± 2.8 ( |
| Hirsch | USA, 10 cities (CA) | Cohort study to examine HIV pharmacy MTM program over 3 years by assessing the association between use of pilot pharmacies and
ARV adherence, medication utilization, occurrence of OIs, medical and pharmacy costs | Participation in pilot Medi-Cal program (pharmacies providing MTM services for HIV+ patients by participating in the special CA Department of Health Care Services Medi-Cal pilot program). Pharmacies had to have >90% HIV+ patients, ability to provide specialized HIV services, identify patients who should receive MTM services | HIV+, Medi-Cal beneficiary, ≥18 years, enrolled from 1/1/2004–12/31/2007, at least 1 ARV and 1 medical claim with HIV diagnosis in 2004 and 1/1/2005–12/31/2007.
Pilot pharmacy: filled ≥50% of ARVs in 2005 at pilot pharmacy. Nonpilot pharmacy: filled ARVs at any pharmacy | Counseled on adherence, consulted with other providers, managed ADR, tailored regimen to fit patient’s lifestyle or needs, offered adherence packaging (eg, blister packs), offered refill reminders and weekly phone calls or home visits after ARV initiation, identified peer advocates, counseled when ARV under- or over-use detected. Had advanced training in HIV medical care | Refill | NR | NR | Cost per patient in 2007: A = $38,983; B = $38,856 ( |
| Krummenacher | Switzerland, Lausanne | Before-after comparison to examine patients in adherence program; reasons for enrolling; adherence rate; clinical outcomes; pharmacy visits; reasons for ARV adjustments; reasons for program interruption | – | Referred to program between 8/2004–4/2008, ARVs delivered in EDMs, completed at least 2 pharmacist MIs | Trained in MI. Conducts MI based on IMB model, provided EDM, prepared adherence report (visit summary and EDM report) sent to physician | EDM | Undetectability increased significantly at end of study vs baseline. No statistically significant difference in median viral load (c/mL) between end of study and baseline | No statistically significant difference in median CD4+ between end of study and baseline in those on ARVs throughout study | 1388 pharmacy visits over study period; 35 minutes per visit |
| Henderson | USA, Denver (CO) | Before-after comparison to assess impact of adherence activities in a pharmacist-managed clinic by measuring proportion of those with ≥95% adherence before and after referral to the program | – | 18–75 years, on ARVs > 3 months, got medications from clinic pharmacy | Had 5 visits patient- tailored over 6 months (at referral, 2 weeks, 1 month, then every 2 months × 2). | Refill, self-report, therapeutic drug monitoring >95% adherence: 7% (pre) to 32% (post; | 15% increase in proportion of patients with undetectable VL ( | NR | – |
| Discussed nonadherence reasons and strategies to improve it (eg, pill box, AE management, education, telephone refill reminders) | Proportion days covered: 60% (pre) to 81% (post; | ||||||||
Notes:
Estimated based on end of recruitment year plus maximum length of follow-up;
Median age.
Abbreviations: ADR, adverse drug reaction; AE, adverse effect; ARV, antiretroviral; BL, Black; CA, California; CI, confidence interval; c/mL, copies/mL; CO, Colorado; ED, emergency department; EDM, electronic drug monitor; HAART, highly active antiretroviral therapy; IDU, intravenous drug use; IMB, information, motivation, behavioral skills; ITT, intention to treat; KP, Kaiser Permanente; mDAART, modified directly administered antiretroviral treatment; MI, motivational interview; MSM, men who have sex with men; MTM, medication therapy management; NC, North Carolina; NNRTI, nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; NRTI, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; NR, not reported; NSS, not statistically significant; OI, opportunistic infection; OK, Oklahoma; OR, odds ratio; PA, Pennsylvania; PCP, primary care provider; PI, protease inhibitor; PK, pharmacokinetic; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RH, relative hazard; RN, registered nurse; RR, rate ratio; TX, Texas; VL, viral load; VS, versus; WA, Washington; WH, White.
Summary of studies with secondary outcomes
| Source | Country, City (State) | Study design and objectives | Inclusion/exclusion criteria | Description of pharmacist’s role | Outcomes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Number of clinical care activities of interventions conducted | Majority of clinical care activities or interventions related to: | Other outcomes | |||||
| Walji | Canada, Vancouver | Descriptive study to characterize the type, frequency, and acceptance by physician or patient of pharmacist-initiated clinical care activities regarding AZT in nonhospitalized patients with AIDS | NR | Interviewed patients; explained information about clinical trial, AZT, adverse effects and management; examined signs and symptoms of efficacy and toxicity using data from patient and chart; intervened if suboptimal utilization or adverse effects | 75 clinical care activities | NR | – |
| Geletko | USA, Providence (RI) | Descriptive study to evaluate differences in pharmaceutical care between hospitalized HIV+ patients and ID consult HIV− patients | NR | Monitored HIV+ and hospitalized ID consult patients. Clinical care activities included decrease/increase dose, initiate/change/discontinue drug, prevent ADR/allergy/interaction, pharmacokinetics, provide drug information | 218 clinical care activities | Activities performed: (for HIV+/HIV− patients) | Cost avoidance = $1888.35 (mean cost-avoidance per clinical care activity = $49.69). Difference between groups with regard to expected outcome for cost-avoidance, prevention of ADR/errors, enhance treatment efficacy, knowledge gained were statistically significant |
| Bozek | USA, Baltimore (MD) | Descriptive study to assess differences in the rate and cost of pharmacotherapeutic clinical care activities performed for HIV+ and HIV− inpatients and to compare medication use between HIV+ and HIV− patients Intervention: none | NR | Performed medical rounds, chart review, therapeutic drug monitoring. Intervened to change therapy for untreated indication, drug use without indication, subtherapeutic dose, overdose, ADR, interaction, inappropriate route | HIV+: 4.6 clinical care activities per patient (95% CI: 3.2–6.1); HIV−: 1.9 per patient (95% CI: 1.2–2.6) ( | DRP identified: | Drug acquisition cost: decreased by 14% for HIV+ and increased by <1% for HIV−. Hospital length of stay: HIV+: 11.5 days; HIV−: 7.3 days (NSS) |
| Garey | USA, Chicago (IL) | Descriptive study to portray and characterize the pharmacist’s clinical care activities in an HIV clinic. Estimate the percentage of clinical care activities accepted by physician | NR | Compared inpatient orders to outpatient regimen; evaluated accuracy and appropriateness of orders; examined for dosing errors and interactions; contacted physician to clarify medication issued; intervened with house staff | 68 clinical care activities conducted (at least 1 intervention for 70% of patients): 94% rated clinically significant | DRP identified: | – |
| Geletko | USA, Providence (RI) | Descriptive study to characterize pharmaceutical-related clinical care activities in a pharmacist-directed HIV clinic | NR | Evaluated adherence, made recommendations on ARV initiation, entered prescription, dispensed medications, called patient 1 week after initiation to assess adherence and tolerance | 1365 clinical care activities documented (mean of 1.7 per patient): | Activities performed: | – |
| Segarra-Newnham | USA, West Palm Beach (FL) | Descriptive study to describe the utility of a clinical pharmacist’s evaluation of HIV+ patients upon hospital admission | HIV+, admitted for at least 24 hours | Monitored HIV+ inpatients; wrote Pharmacy Admission Note within 24 hours of admission; evaluated and communicated correct regimen; educated patients medications; made pharmacotherapy clinic appointment | Total of 317 clinical care activities (median 4.2 per patient); 55% of recommendations avoided medication errors via reconciliation | Activities performed: | – |
| De Maat | Netherlands, Amsterdam | Controlled before-after comparison to evaluate the usefulness of drug-interaction interventions by clinical pharmacist. | Scheduled outpatient visit, signed informed consent | Obtained pharmacy records and screened list of drugs for drug interactions and sent notification to physician along with advice on how to handle it | Arm A: 36 interventions | Most common interactions involved: | There was a decrease in number of interactions between baseline and 3 months but effect similar between 2 arms |
| Foisy | Canada, Edmonton | Descriptive study to portray implementation of DOT to inner-city patients and the identification and management of DRPs and outcomes during 14 months of a pharmacist position | NR | Obtained baseline data (medication history, illicit drug use, lab data); selected ARVs with physician; provided medication counseling and weekly patient follow-up; communicated patient progress and adherence to physician | 149 DRP identified (mean 2.6 DRP per patient) | DRP identified: | – |
| Sterling | USA, Lexington (KY) | Historically controlled trial to examine change in number of ARV errors 1 year prior to (March 2001–March 2002) and 1 year after (April 2002–March 2003) the implementation of pharmacy admission notes | ≥18 years, HIV diagnosis and ARV orders on admission. Exclude: HIV diagnosis during admission, length of stay <1 day, pregnant | Within 24 hours of admission, interviewed patient; conducted chart review; documented patient’s demographics, recent VL/CD4+, diagnosis, home and inpatient medications. Evaluated patient’s medications for drug interaction, verify doses and frequencies, assess prior ARV adherence, and determine need for dose adjustments | Pre: 1 of 27 ARV errors identified and addressed by pharmacy note. Post: 3 of 46 ARV errors detected and addressed in pharmacy admission notes. | NR | – |
| Heelon | USA, Springfield (MA) | Historically controlled trial to compare duration of ARV-related error in hospitalized patients prior to (pre: 1/2005–6/2005) and after (post: 8/2005–2/2006) presence of pharmacist’s activities | ≥18 years, admitted to hospital, on HAART Exclude: patients in pharmacist’s outpatient clinic | Intervene on ARV errors by discussing with staff or MD. Retrospectively identified ARV errors, including: incomplete regimen, incorrect dose, incorrect schedule, drug interaction, incorrect formulation, incorrect ARV, duplicate therapy | 73 ARV errors in 41 patients (17% pre versus 24% post) | DRP identified: | Length of time until error corrected significantly shorter post pharmacist (84 hours pre versus 15.5 hours post; |
| Pastakia | US, Chapel Hill (NC) | Descriptive study to evaluate frequency and severity of ARV prescribing errors in inpatients, hospitalization and discharge errors, physician acceptance of pharmacy recommendations, risk factors associated with occurrence of errors | HIV+, ≥18 years, received care at ID/HIV clinic of hospital, continued ARVs upon admission | Reviewed ARVs of HIV+ inpatients, identified ARV errors, resolved errors by making recommendations to clinical team. Errors classified as: Class 1: unlikely to cause patient discomfort or clinical deterioration; Class 2: had the potential to cause moderate discomfort or clinical deterioration; Class 3: had the potential to cause severe discomfort or clinical deterioration | Initial regimen: 72% of patients had at least 1 error; 56% had at least 1 class 2/3; inpatient physician errors made up 45% of errors (all class 2/3); inpatient pharmacy errors made up 33% of errors (37% class 2/3). Initial regimen and hospitalization: 119 errors observed (82% class 2/3); 84% of patients had at least 1 error; 65% had at least 1 class 2/3 | NR | No factor (patient, provider, drug regimen characteristics) was predictor of initial inpatient ARV errors. Use of ATV was a predictor of errors during hospitalization/discharge. Risk factor predisposing patients to having >1 class 2 or 3 error was regimens requiring conversion from outpatient to hospital formulary |
| Horace | USA, Augusta (GA) | Descriptive study to retrospectively identify common medication-related problems for HIV+ patients and a historically controlled trial to evaluate the effect of a pharmacy monitoring services pilot program | NR | Followed HIV+ patients; contacted patient or family or pharmacy to obtain correct information; communicated medication errors with medicine team; intervened on medication related problems | 42 clinical care activities | Activities performed: 35%: complete home medication list; 18%: resolve drug–drug interactions; 18%: reconciled inpatient medications to home medication list | Home medication documentation improved by 24%; matching inpatient to home medications by 26%. 9% of patients had medications discontinued for >24 hours (100% had appropriate reason) versus 42% prior to pharmacist (67% had no appropriate reasons). Appropriate ARV dosing and scheduling increased by 21% |
| Carcelero | Spain, Barcelona | Descriptive study to identify and describe ARV-related errors in medication prescribing and determine degree of acceptance of pharmacist’s patient-care activities | HIV+, ≥18years, admitted to Hospital Clinic, prescribed ARVs | Checked for drug–drug interactions, incorrect or incomplete ARV regimens, omitted doses, incorrect doses, lack of dose reduction for renal/hepatic impairment, and incorrect schedule | 247 admissions reviewed, 60 drug-related problems identified in 41 patients (21.7%) | DRP identified: | Factors associated with increased risk of ARV problems: renal impairment, use of ATV, admission to unit other than ID unit. Majority of errors occurred at admission |
Notes:
Estimated based on end of recruitment year plus maximum length of follow-up;
median age.
Abbreviations: ADR, adverse drug reaction; ARV, antiretroviral; ATV, atazanavir; AZT, zidovudine; BL, Black; BZD, benzodiazepine; CI, confidence interval; Cost avoidance, (acquisition cost of drug regimen at time of evaluation – acquisition cost of recommended drug regimen) × duration of treatment while patient in hospital; d4T, stavudine; DOT, directly observed therapy; DRP, drug-related problem; GA, Georgia; HAART, highly active antiretroviral therapy; ID, infectious diseases; IL, Illinois; KY, Kentucky; MA, Massachusetts; MD, Maryland; MSM, men who have sex with men; NC, North Carolina; NR, not reported; NSS, not statistically significant; NVP, nevirapine; PCP, pneumocystis carinii pneumonia; RI, Rhode Island; RR, relative risk; RTV, ritonavir; SD, standard deviation; SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; VL, viral load; WH, White.