| Literature DB >> 29334546 |
Catherine E Oldenburg1,2, Jacob Bor3,4, Guy Harling4,5,6, Frank Tanser4,7, Tinofa Mutevedzi4, Maryam Shahmanesh4,6, George R Seage1, Victor De Gruttola8, Matthew J Mimiaga1,9,10, Kenneth H Mayer5,9,11, Deenan Pillay4,12, Till Bärnighausen4,5,13,14.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We investigate the effect of immediate antiretroviral therapy (ART) eligibility on HIV incidence among HIV-uninfected household members.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29334546 PMCID: PMC5832606 DOI: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000001737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS ISSN: 0269-9370 Impact factor: 4.632
Baseline characteristics of study sample by household member antiretroviral therapy eligibility (N = 4115).
| Below threshold, | Above threshold, | Balance test | |
| Age when first household member linked to care, years, median (IQR) | 20 (16–48) | 20 (16–47) | 0.15 |
| Female sex | 1529 (61.4%) | 1015 (62.4%) | 0.70 |
| Number of HIV-uninfected individuals in household, median (IQR) | 3 (2–4) | 3 (2–4) | 0.58 |
| Highest education attainment | |||
| Less than 7 years | 1026 (41.2%) | 682 (41.9%) | 0.38 |
| 7–12 years | 1394 (56.0%) | 891 (54.8%) | |
| More than 12 years | 63 (2.5%) | 51 (3.1%) | |
| Knows HIV status | 481 (19.3%) | 295 (18.1%) | 0.77 |
| Household location | |||
| Urban | 42 (1.7%) | 42 (2.6%) | 0.78 |
| Peri-urban | 904 (36.3%) | 536 (33.0%) | |
| Rural | 1544 (62.0%) | 1048 (64.5%) | |
| Household distance to clinic, km (median, IQR) | 2.7 (1.5–3.9) | 2.7 (1.5–4.1) | 0.28 |
| Household wealth (quintile) | |||
| Lowest quintile | 420 (16.7%) | 260 (16.0%) | 0.31 |
| Second lowest | 481 (19.3%) | 333 (20.5%) | |
| Middle | 585 (23.5%) | 375 (23.1%) | |
| Second highest | 496 (19.9%) | 356 (21.9%) | |
| Highest | 419 (16.8%) | 233 (14.3%) | |
| Missing | 89 (3.6%) | 69 (4.2%) | |
IQR, interquartile range.
*Regression discontinuity model using each baseline covariate as the outcome model to test if there is a discontinuity at the CD4+ cell count thresholds. A linear regression model was used for continuous variables, logistic regression for dichotomous variables, and ordinal logistic regression for ordinal variables.
Fig. 1Probability of antiretroviral therapy initiation by baseline CD4+ cell count.
Fig. 2Regression discontinuity validity test – histogram displaying distribution of baseline CD4+ cell counts.
Fig. 3HIV incidence by baseline CD4+ cell count.
Regression discontinuity intention-to-treat effects of antiretroviral therapy on household HIV incidence.
| Range | Cox | Cox, quadratic | Cox, restricted cubic splines | |
| 0–350 | ||||
| Immediate ART | 4115 | |||
| Slope above | 0.999 (0.996–1.003) | 0.993 (0.979–1.007) | 0.996 (0.987–1.006) | |
| Slope below | 0.997 (0.993–1.002) | 0.997 (0.980–1.014) | 1.006 (0.994–1.018) | |
| 50–350 | ||||
| Immediate ART | 3531 | |||
| Slope above | 0.999 (0.996–1.003) | 0.993 (0.979–1.007) | 0.996 (0.987–1.006) | |
| Slope below | 0.994 (0.989–0.999) | 1.007 (0.986–1.028) | 0.990 (0.971–1.010) | |
| 105–295 | ||||
| Immediate ART | 2356 | |||
| Slope above | 0.998 (0.991–1.006) | 0.973 (0.949–0.997) | 0.983 (0.968–0.999) | |
| Slope below | 0.995 (0.984–1.005) | 1.035 (0.996–1.076) | 0.941 (0.854–1.037) | |
| 150–250 | ||||
| Immediate ART | 1268 | |||
| Slope above | 0.986 (0.969–1.002) | |||
| Slope below | 1.014 (0.988–1.040) | |||
| 175–225 | ||||
| Immediate ART | 615 | |||
| Slope above | 0.980 (0.938–1.023) | |||
| Slope below | 1.001 (0.938–1.080) | |||
ART, antiretroviral therapy. The numbers shown in bold font are the main effect size estimates.
aDifference in slope of CD4+ cell count above the 200 cell/μl threshold.
bDifference in slope of CD4+ cell count bellow the 200 cell/μl threshold.
cOptimal bandwidth determined by the Imbens–Kalyanaraman algorithm [33].