| Literature DB >> 28691440 |
Chloe A Teasdale1,2, Nonzwakazi Sogaula1, Katharine A Yuengling1, Zachary J Peters1, Anthony Mutiti1, Lungile Pepeta3,4, Elaine J Abrams1,2,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Decentralization of HIV care for children has been recommended to improve paediatric outcomes by making antiretroviral treatment (ART) more accessible. We documented outcomes of children transferred after initiating ART at a large tertiary hospital in the Eastern Cape of South Africa.Entities:
Keywords: ART; decentralization; loss to follow-up; paediatric HIV; referral; retention
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28691440 PMCID: PMC5515030 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.20.1.21748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Characteristics of all children who initiated ART at Dora Nginza Hospital in Port Elizabeth, South Africa by transfer status (N = 1,582)
| All | Ever transferred | Never transferred | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,582 (100.0) | 901 (57.0) | 681 (43.0) | ||
| 2004–2006 | 381 (24.2) | 292 (32.5) | 89 (13.1) | <.0001 |
| 2007–2009 | 579 (36.7) | 420 (46.7) | 159 (23.5) | |
| 2010–2012 | 416 (26.4) | 154 (17.1) | 262 (38.6) | |
| 2013–2015 | 201 (12.8) | 33 (3.7) | 168 (24.8) | |
| 4 (1–8) | 4 (1–8) | 3 (1–8) | 0.06 | |
| <2 | 480 (30.3) | 229 (25.4) | 251 (36.9) | |
| 2–5 | 488 (30.9) | 308 (34.2) | 180 (26.4) | <.0001 |
| 6–10 | 490 (31.0) | 307 (34.1) | 183 (26.9) | |
| >10 | 124 (7.8) | 57 (6.3) | 67 (9.8) | |
| 755 (47.7) | 425 (47.2) | 330 (48.5) | 0.64 | |
| 278 (119–526) | 276 (131–507) | 285 (99–545) | 0.32 | |
| <200 | 223 (36.6) | 130 (35.0) | 93 (39.1) | 0.31 |
| 200–350 | 145 (23.8) | 98 (26.3) | 47 (19.8) | |
| 351–500 | 83 (13.6) | 49 (13.2) | 34 (14.3) | |
| >500 | 159 (26.1) | 95 (25.5) | 64 (26.9) | |
| Missing CD4 at ART initiation | 972 (61.4) | 529 (58.7) | 443 (65.1) | 0.01 |
| ABC+3TC+EFV | 10 (1.6) | 3 (1.0) | 7 (2.2) | <.0001 |
| ABC+3TC+LPV/r | 236 (37.4) | 65 (20.5) | 171 (54.5) | |
| d4T+3TC+EFV | 34 (5.4) | 23 (7.3) | 11 (3.5) | |
| d4T+3TC+LPV/r | 287 (45.5) | 194 (61.2) | 93 (29.6) | |
| Other | 64 (10.1) | 32 (10.1) | 32 (10.2) | |
| ABC+3TC+EFV | 281 (30.1) | 86 (15.0) | 195 (54.0) | <.0001 |
| ABC+3TC+LPV/r | 25 (2.7) | 10 (1.7) | 15 (4.2) | |
| d4T+3TC+EFV | 465 (49.7) | 362 (63.1) | 103 (28.5) | |
| d4T+3TC+LPV/r | 22 (2.4) | 14 (2.4) | 8 (2.2) | |
| Other | 142 (15.2) | 102 (17.8) | 40 (11.1) | |
| >1 million | 13 (1.2) | 5 (0.9) | 8 (1.5) | 0.01 |
| 10,000–999,999 | 136 (12.5) | 53 (9.4) | 83 (15.9) | |
| 1,000–9,999 | 61 (5.6) | 37 (6.6) | 24 (4.6) | |
| 400–999 | 37 (3.4) | 17 (3.0) | 20 (3.8) | |
| <400 | 838 (77.2) | 450 (80.1) | 388 (74.2) | |
| Missing viral load | 497 (31.4) | 339 (37.6) | 158 (23.2) | <.0001 |
Figure 1.Outcomes of children started on ART at Dora Nginza Hospital in Port Elizabeth, South Africa January 2004–September 2015 (N = 1,582).
*Children <15 years LTF in last 5 years with contact information.
**Among 62 children still alive.
Characteristics of children transferred after ART initiation at Dora Nginza Hospital in Port Elizabeth, South Africa to 16 health facilities in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa (N = 644)
| All | Successful transfer | LTF during transfer | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 644 (100.0) | 433 (67.2) | 211 (32.7) | ||
| 2004–2006 | 231 (35.9) | 158 (36.6) | 73 (34.6) | 0.60 |
| 2007–2009 | 314 (48.8) | 207 (47.9) | 107 (50.7) | |
| 2010–2012 | 85 (13.2) | 60 (13.9) | 25 (11.9) | |
| 2013–2015 | 13 (2.0) | 7 (1.6) | 6 (2.8) | |
| 4 (2–8) | 4 (2–8) | 4 (1–8) | 0.14 | |
| <2 | 154 (23.9) | 92 (21.3) | 62 (29.4) | 0.05 |
| 2–5 | 220 (34.2) | 153 (35.3) | 67 (31.8) | |
| 6–10 | 229 (35.6) | 164 (37.9) | 65 (30.8) | |
| >10 | 41 (6.4) | 24 (5.5) | 17 (8.1) | |
| 2004–2006 | 1 (0.2) | 0 (0) | 1 (0.5) | 0.55 |
| 2007–2009 | 67 (10.4) | 45 (10.4) | 22 (10.4) | |
| 2010–2012 | 541 (84.0) | 365 (84.3) | 176 (83.4) | |
| 2013–2015 | 35 (5.4) | 23 (5.3) | 12 (5.7) | |
| 8 (5–11) | 8 (5–11) | 7 (4–11) | 0.08 | |
| <2 | 30 (4.7) | 18 (4.2) | 12 (5.7) | 0.05 |
| 2–5 | 185 (28.7) | 111 (25.6) | 74 (35.1) | |
| 6–10 | 230 (35.7) | 165 (38.1) | 65 (30.8) | |
| >10 | 199 (30.9) | 139 (32.1) | 60 (28.4) | |
| 37.3 (20.6–50.6) | 38.3 (20.7–51.2) | 36.2 (19.3–50.0) | 0.41 | |
| 312 (48.5) | 210 (48.5) | 102 (48.3) | 0.97 | |
| 271 (128–494) | 276 (120–521) | 262.5 (141–434) | 0.35 | |
| <200 | 95 (34.6) | 67 (35.5) | 28 (32.6) | 0.31 |
| 200–350 | 76 (27.6) | 46 (24.3) | 30 (34.9) | |
| 351–500 | 38 (13.8) | 27 (14.3) | 11 (12.8) | |
| >500 | 66 (24.0) | 49 (25.9) | 17 (19.8) | |
| Missing CD4 at ART initiation | 369 (57.3) | 244 (56.4) | 125 (59.2) | 0.49 |
| 0.97 | ||||
| ABC+3TC+EFV | 3 (1.4) | 2 (1.5) | 1 (1.2) | |
| ABC+3TC+LPV/r | 34 (15.5) | 22 (16.7) | 12 (13.8) | |
| d4T+3TC+EFV | 18 (8.2) | 10 (7.6) | 8 (9.2) | |
| d4T+3TC+LPV/r | 141 (64.4) | 84 (63.6) | 57 (65.5) | |
| Other | 23 (10.5) | 14 (10.6) | 9 (10.3) | |
| 0.68 | ||||
| ABC+3TC+EFV | 43 (10.3) | 31 (10.5) | 12 (9.8) | |
| ABC+3TC+LPV/r | 6 (1.4) | 3 (1.0) | 3 (2.4) | |
| d4T+3TC+EFV | 280 (66.8) | 202 (68.2) | 78 (63.4) | |
| d4T+3TC+LPV/r | 13 (3.1) | 9 (3.0) | 4 (3.3) | |
| Other | 77 (18.4) | 51 (17.2) | 26 (21.1) | |
| >1 million | 2 (0.6) | 0 (0) | 2 (1.8) | 0.15 |
| 10,000–999,999 | 25 (7.3) | 18 (7.8) | 7 (6.3) | |
| 1,000–9,999 | 26 (7.6) | 17 (7.3) | 9 (8.1) | |
| 400–999 | 10 (2.9) | 9 (3.9) | 1 (0.9) | |
| <400 | 280 (81.6) | 188 (81.0) | 92 (82.9) | |
| Missing viral load | 301 (46.7) | 201 (46.4) | 100 (47.4) | 0.82 |
Characteristics of children started on ART at Dora Nginza Hospital and subsequently lost to follow-up who were located alive through community tracing (N = 62)
| 62 (100) | |
| 2 (1–5) | |
| <2 | 23 (37.1) |
| 2–5 | 25 (40.3) |
| 6–10 | 13 (21.0) |
| >10 | 1 (1.6) |
| 10 (8–12) | |
| <2 | 0 (0) |
| 2–5 | 8 (12.9) |
| 6–10 | 31 (50.0) |
| >10 | 23 (37.1) |
| 3.5 (1.8–4.8) | |
| <1 year | 4 (6.5) |
| 1–2 years | 14 (22.6) |
| ≥3 years | 44 (71.0) |
| 35 (56.5) | |
| Mother | 26 (41.9) |
| Grandmother | 17 (27.4) |
| Other family/relative | 13 (20.9) |
| Adoptive, foster parent, other | 6 (9.7) |
| 50 (80.6) | |
| 12 (3–36) | |
| 42 (68.9) | |
| 24 (39.3), 4 (1–7) | |
| 17 (27.4), 11 (10–12) | |
| 42 (67.7) | |
| 22 (52.4) | |
| Inside tap | 50 (75.8) |
| Electricity | 57 (86.4) |
Reasons for removal from care, treatment interruptions and missed visits among children started on ART at Dora Nginza Hospital and subsequently lost to follow-up who were located alive through community tracing (N = 62)
| 62 (100) | |
| 8 (12.9) | |
| Caregiver does not have time | 1 (12.5) |
| Caregiver does not like going to health facility | 1 (12.5) |
| Caregiver does not want child to take ARVs | 1 (12.5) |
| Child refuses to go | 1 (12.5) |
| Caregiver was away | 1 (12.5) |
| 4 (50.0) | |
| 18 (29.0) | |
| Child refuses to take ARVs | 6 (33.3) |
| Caregiver does not have time or transport to pick up medication | 2 (1.1) |
| Caregiver does not want child to take ARVs | 2 (1.1) |
| Family disruption | 3 (1.7) |
| Caregiver doesn’t like going to the facility/disclosure issues | 3 (1.7) |
| 27 (45.8) | |
| <1 month | 3 (11.1) |
| 1–3 months | 5 (18.5) |
| >3 months | 19 (70.4) |
| Child was too sick or refused to take | 7 (25.9) |
| Caregiver did not have time or funds | 11 (40.7) |
| Child was not going to health clinic | 2 (7.4) |
| Family disruption | 4 (14.8) |
| Caregiver doesn’t like going to the facility/disclosure issues | 2 (7.4) |
| 24 (38.7) | |
| No money for transport | 5 |
| Child refuses to take ARVs | 6 (25.0) |
| Caregiver does not have time to pick up medication | 4 (16.7) |
| Caregiver does not want child to take ARVs | 2 (8.3) |
| Family disruption | 5 (20.8) |
| Caregiver doesn’t like going to the facility/disclosure issues | 3 (12.5) |
Figure 2.Identifying silent transfer and current engagement in care using laboratory data and community tracing information for 399 children LTF after ART initiation at Dora Nginza Hospital, Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
* some children had both lab data and were reported to be in care; the totals for “currently in care” (lower dark grey boxes) are children who had either labs or were reported to be in care. For example, among children LTF at DNH, there were 2 children who had both lab data and were located and reported to be in care, therefore 29/105 or 27.6% overall within this group are reported as “currently in care” (rather than 31).
Viral load (copies/mL) test results from 2015/2016 for children initiated on ART at Dora Nginza Hospital among those transferred or lost to follow-up (N = 749)
| Total ( | LTF from DNH ( | LTF during transfer ( | LTF after successful transfer ( | Not LTF after successful transfer ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number (%) of children with VL test results | 147 (19.6) | 14 (13.3) | 36 (17.1) | 9 (10.8) | 88 (25.1) |
| Median (IQR) | 63 (50–3,715) | 5,349 (104–123,266) | 50 (50–1,387) | 2,072 (220–55,140) | 50 (50–486) |
| >1 million | 1 (0.7) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (1.1) |
| 10,000–999,999 | 26 (17.7) | 6 (42.9) | 4 (11.1) | 4 (44.4) | 12 (13.6) |
| 1,000–9,999 | 16 (10.9) | 3 (21.4) | 5 (13.9) | 1 (11.1) | 7 (8.0) |
| 51–999 | 31 (21.1) | 2 (14.3) | 8 (22.2) | 4 (44.4) | 17 (19.3) |
| ≤50 | 73 (49.7) | 3 (21.4) | 19 (52.8) | 0 (0) | 51 (58.0) |