| Literature DB >> 23568228 |
Kathy Goggin1, Mary M Gerkovich, Karen B Williams, Julie W Banderas, Delwyn Catley, Jannette Berkley-Patton, Glenn J Wagner, James Stanford, Sally Neville, Vinutha K Kumar, David M Bamberger, Lisa A Clough.
Abstract
This study determined whether motivational interviewing-based cognitive behavioral therapy (MI-CBT) adherence counseling combined with modified directly observed therapy (MI-CBT/mDOT) is more effective than MI-CBT counseling alone or standard care (SC) in increasing adherence over time. A three-armed randomized controlled 48-week trial with continuous electronic drug monitored adherence was conducted by randomly assigning 204 HIV-positive participants to either 10 sessions of MI-CBT counseling with mDOT for 24 weeks, 10 sessions of MI-CBT counseling alone, or SC. Poisson mixed effects regression models revealed significant interaction effects of intervention over time on non-adherence defined as percent of doses not-taken (IRR = 1.011, CI = 1.000-1.018) and percent of doses not-taken on time (IRR = 1.006, CI = 1.001-1.011) in the 30 days preceding each assessment. There were no significant differences between groups, but trends were observed for the MI-CBT/mDOT group to have greater 12 week on-time and worse 48 week adherence than the SC group. Findings of modest to null impact on adherence despite intensive interventions highlights the need for more effective interventions to maintain high adherence over time.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23568228 PMCID: PMC3672512 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-013-0467-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1Study flowchart
Demographic characteristics of the sample at baseline
| Variables | Treatment | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SC | MI-CBT | MI-CBT/mDOT | ||||
|
| % or mean (SD) |
| % or mean (SD) |
| % or mean (SD) | |
| Age—Mean (SD) | 65 | 40.4 (8.2) | 70 | 40.8 (9.6) | 69 | 39.9 (10.7) |
| Male gender at birth (%) | 50 | 76.9 % | 50 | 71.4 % | 55 | 79.7 % |
| Ethnicity/race Hispanic (%) | 4 | 6.2 % | 8 | 11.4 % | 7 | 10.1 % |
| African American (%) | 38 | 58.5 % | 35 | 50.0 % | 43 | 62.3 % |
| White (%) | 21 | 32.3 % | 22 | 31.4 % | 22 | 31.9 % |
| Other (%) | 6 | 9.2 % | 13 | 18.6 % | 4 | 5.8 % |
| Income | 40 | 69.0 % | 44 | 67.7 % | 41 | 66.1 % |
| Education | ||||||
| Less than high school degree (%) | 17 | 26.2 % | 14 | 20.0 % | 15 | 21.7 % |
| High school graduate/GED (%) | 21 | 32.3 % | 20 | 28.6 % | 21 | 30.4 % |
| More than high school degree (%) | 27 | 41.5 % | 36 | 51.4 % | 33 | 47.8 % |
| Work status | ||||||
| Working full time/part time (%)a | 17 | 26.2 % | 23 | 32.9 % | 20 | 29.0 % |
| On disability (%) | 31 | 47.7 % | 25 | 35.7 % | 21 | 30.4 % |
| No income (%) | 9 | 13.9 % | 14 | 20.0 % | 21 | 30.4 % |
| Married/committed relationship | 15 | 23.4 % | 15 | 21.7 % | 20 | 29.0 % |
| Covered by private insurance (%) | 5 | 7.7 % | 5 | 7.1 % | 8 | 11.6 % |
| CD4—% below 200 cells | 31 | 47.6 % | 25 | 36.2 % | 33 | 47.8 % |
| ART Naïve | 21 | 32.3 % | 24 | 34.3 % | 24 | 34.8 % |
| Illicit drug use in last 3 months (%) | 29 | 44.6 % | 29 | 42.0 % | 30 | 43.5 % |
| Binge drinking in last 30 days (%) | 15 | 23.1 % | 11 | 15.9 % | 14 | 20.3 % |
| CES-D total score | 35 | 53.8 % | 39 | 56.5 % | 33 | 47.8 % |
aCategories are not mutually exclusive and three participants both worked and collected disability. Results for some baseline data for the EC group is based on 69/70 participants as a portion of one participant’s baseline evaluation was lost during data transfer
Percent adherence and clinical outcomes data by intervention arm
| EDM % doses taken | All participants | SC | MI-CBT | MI-CBT/mDOT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M (SD) | M (SD) | M (SD) | M (SD) | |
| 12 weeks | 78.5 (29.8) | 75.3 (32.6) | 77.6 (32.1) | 82.5 (23.6) |
| 24 weeks | 73.0 (32.2) | 73.5 (32.5) | 70.9 (34.5) | 74.4 (30.1) |
| 36 weeks | 70.3 (32.4) | 74.7 (30.3) | 69.3 (33.1) | 67.2 (33.7) |
| 48 weeks | 69.6 (32.4) | 75.5 (29.7) | 69.3 (32.6) | 64.6 (34.4) |
EDM electronic drug monitored
Poisson random coefficients model: incident rate ratios for intervention group, observation period, and the group by time interaction for the level of non-adherence
| Variables: models 1 and 2 | Percent not takena | Percent not taken on timea | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRR | 95 % CI |
| IRR | 95 % CI |
| |
| Observation period (12 weeks reference) | .990 | (.974, 1.005) | .195 | 1.000 | (.989, 1.011) | .967 |
| Intervention group (SC reference) | .797 | (.541, 1.175) | .252 | .782 | (.594, 1.029) | .079 |
| Interaction | 1.011 | (1.004, 1.018) | .003 | 1.006 | (1.001, 1.011) | .015 |
a N for full models: 709 observations on 190 participants
Poisson random coefficients model: incident rate ratios for intervention dose and observation period for the level of non-adherence for participants in the intervention groups
| Variables: models 3 and 4 | Percent not takena | Percent not taken on timea | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRR | 95 % CI |
| IRR | 95 % CI |
| |
| Observation period (12 weeks reference) | 1.016 | (1.009, 1.023) | <.001 | 1.015 | (1.010, 1.020) | <.001 |
| Intervention dose (first quintile reference) | ||||||
| Second quintile | .318 | (.110, .923) | .035 | .473 | (.217, 1.035) | .061 |
| Third quintile | .161 | (.052, .494) | .001 | .359 | (.158, .816) | .014 |
| Fourth quintile | .044 | (.015, .129) | <.001 | .129 | (.058, .284) | <.001 |
| Fifth quintile | .034 | (.011, .100) | <.001 | .077 | (.035, .171) | <.001 |
a N for full models: 482 observations on 129 participants