| Literature DB >> 26155445 |
Jörg Mahlich1, Johannes R Bogner2, Jörg Tomeczkowski3, Matthias Stoll4.
Abstract
A recent observational study of HIV patients in Germany suggests that treatment naïve patients that are in a more advanced stage of their disease are more likely to receive a treatment regimen based on a boosted protease inhibitor (PI/r) compared with a non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase-inhibitor (NNRTI) base regimen. To validate those results we analysed claims data of seven German sickness funds from 2009 to 2012 with approximately 4 million beneficiaries. Patients in a more advanced disease state (CDC class C) had a higher likelihood to receive a PI/r based regime rather than a NNRTI based regimen as their initial treatment. There was also a significant correlation between PI/r based regimen and number of comorbidities but not with age. Our results confirm a highly significant relationship between being in a more severe stage of HIV disease and a PI/r based treatment regimen.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; Antiretroviral treatment; Claims data; Decision; HIV infection; NNRTI; PI; Real world evidence
Year: 2015 PMID: 26155445 PMCID: PMC4486650 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-015-1099-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Description of the sample
| Number of patients (%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total sick fund population | 4,000,000 (100) | |||
| HIV diagnosed | Total PLWHA | 5,792 (0.14) | ||
| ART | Total ART | 2,082 (35.95) | ||
| Tx naive | Total Tx naive | 441 (21.18) | ||
| PI-based | 174 (39.46) | |||
| NNRTI-based | 141 (31.97) | |||
| Others | 126 (28.57) | |||
Figure 1Share of treatment naïve patients in CDC C stage according to treatment regimen.
Claims data vs. observational data
| NNRTI | PI | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Claim data (%) | Observational data (Mahlich et al. | Claim data (%) | Observational data (Mahlich et al. | |
| Socio-demographic factors | ||||
| Patient age (in years) at diagnosis | ||||
| <50 | 62.8 | 8.3 | 67.2 | 89.5 |
| ≥50 | 37.2 | 21.7 | 32.8 | 10.5 |
| Anamnestic factors | ||||
| HIV stage according to CDC-classification | ||||
| A + B | 76.6 | 89.1 | 62.9 | 63.2 |
| C (aids) | 23.4 | 10.9 | 37.1 | 36.8 |
| Three or more concomitant diseases | ||||
| No | 72.7 | 80.4 | 62.9 | 76.3 |
| Yes | 27.6 | 19.6 | 37.1 | 23.7 |
List of comorbidities defining CDC stage B and C
| Category B |
|---|
| Bacillary angiomatosis |
| Oropharyngeal Candida infection |
| Vulvovaginal candida infections, which are either chronic (longer than 1 month) or only poorly treatable |
| Cervical dysplasia or carcinoma in situ |
| Constitutional symptoms such as fever above 38.5°C or more than 4 weeks existing diarrhea |
| Oral hairy leukoplakia |
| Herpes zoster infection in multiple dermatomes or after relapse in a dermatome |
| Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura |
| Listeriosis |
| Inflammation of the pelvis, especially when complications of tubal or Ovarialabszesses |
| Peripheral neuropathy |