| Literature DB >> 30621657 |
Angela R Bazzi1, Mari-Lynn Drainoni2,3,4,5, Dea L Biancarelli2, Joshua J Hartman6, Matthew J Mimiaga7,8,9,10, Kenneth H Mayer10,11, Katie B Biello12,13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People who inject drugs (PWID) are at increased risk for HIV acquisition and could benefit from antiretroviral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). However, PrEP has been underutilized in this population, and PrEP adherence intervention needs are understudied.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Antiretroviral therapy; Drug use; People who inject drugs; Pre-exposure prophylaxis; Prevention
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30621657 PMCID: PMC6323713 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-6314-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flowchart of study identification and screening for inclusion in systematic review
Studies of ART adherence among people who inject drugs included in systematic review
| Author, Year | Site(s), Sample | Study Design | Objective(s) | Outcome(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altice et al., 2007 [ | New Haven, CT ( | Randomized controlled trial | Effect of DAART intervention on HIV RNA and CD4 count | Viral load suppression, change in CD4 count, and self-reported adherence |
| Arnsten et al., 2007 [ | Baltimore, MD, Miami, FL, New York, NY, San Francisco, CA ( | Cross-sectional survey | Factors associated with ART adherence and medication errors | Self-reported adherence |
| Azar et al., 2015 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Effect of illicit drug use patterns on ART adherence | Pharmacy records (prescription refill data) |
| Bach et al., 2015 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Effect of methadone discontinuation on ART adherence | Pharmacy records (prescription refill data) |
| Gonzalez et al., 2013 [ | Boston, MA ( | Cross-sectional survey | Association of substance use with ART adherence | Electronic monitoring (MEMS cap data) |
| Hadland et al., 2012 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Effect of age on ART adherence and viral load suppression | Pharmacy records (prescription refill data), viral load suppression |
| Ing et al., 2013 [ | New Haven, CT ( | Prospective cohort within a randomized controlled trial | Patterns of medication non-persistence (in DAART intervention group) | Electronic monitoring (MEMS cap data), viral load suppression |
| Joseph et al., 2015 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Predictors of ART adherence | Pharmacy records (prescription refill data) |
| Kang et al., 2011 [ | New York, NY, Bayamón, PR ( | Cross-sectional survey | Association of gender with HIV care | Self-reported use of HIV medications |
| Kavasery et al., 2009 [ | Baltimore, MD ( | Prospective cohort | Predictors of ART use and non-use | Self-reported dates of ART interruption and initiation |
| Knowlton et al., 2006 [ | Baltimore, MD, Miami, FL, New York, NY, San Francisco, CA ( | Cross-sectional survey | Factors associated with undetectable viral load | Viral load suppression |
| Knowlton et al., 2010 [ | Baltimore, MD, Miami, FL, New York, NY, San Francisco, CA ( | Prospective cohort | Predictors of ART use | Self-reported adherence |
| Palepu et al., 2006 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Effect of methadone therapy on ART adherence, viral load suppression, and CD4 counts | Pharmacy records (prescription refill data), viral load suppression, change in CD4 count |
| Palepu et al., 2011 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Effect of homelessness on ART adherence | Pharmacy records (prescription refill data) |
| Purcell et al., 2007 [ | Baltimore, MD, Miami, FL, New York, NY, San Francisco, CA ( | Randomized controlled trial | Effect of behavioral intervention on HIV transmission behavior, utilization of primary care, and ART adherence | Self-reported sexual and injection behaviors, self-reported number of primary care visits, self-reported adherence |
| Reddon et al., 2014 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Effect of methadone therapy on ART discontinuation | Prescription refill data |
| Tapp et al., 2011 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Effect of gender on ART adherence | Prescription refill data |
| Uhlmann et al., 2010 [ | Vancouver, BC ( | Prospective cohort | Effect of methadone therapy on ART initiation and adherence | Time to first ART use from pharmacy records (prescription refill data) |
| Waldrop-Valverde et al., 2008 [ | South Florida, FL ( | Cross-sectional survey | Associations of low literacy and cognitive impairment with ART adherence | Self-reported adherence |
| Westergaard et al., 2013 [ | Baltimore, MD ( | Prospective cohort | Predictors of linkage to and retention in HIV care, and viral load suppression | Self-reported appointment attendance, self-reported lapses in care, viral load suppression |
aDAART intervention study in New Haven, CT (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00367172; n = 2)
bINSPIRE study; multisite including Baltimore (n = 4)
cVIDUS study in Vancouver, BC (n = 3)
dACCESS study in Vancouver, BC (n = 6)
eALIVE study in Baltimore, MD (n = 2)
Behavioral model of significant afactors influencing ART adherence among people who inject drugs b
| Predisposing Factors | Enabling Factors | Need-Related Factors | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
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aSignificant factors defined as results that were statistically significant in univariate, bivariate, or multi-variate models at p < .10. Study references in bold indicate associations significant at p < .10 in final or multivariable models
bAdapted from the Gelberg-Andersen Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations. Predisposing factors are characteristics that could directly impact adherence, including socio-demographics, substance use barriers, and related sources of social and structural vulnerability. Enabling factors are resources that could facilitate utilization and be targeted by interventions, including individual resources and health service facilitators (e.g., characteristics of healthcare providers and services). Need-related factors include health status barriers, beliefs and perceptions, and health risks that could also influence adherence
cDirections of associations between CD4 count and adherence outcomes were mixed; unlike the studies referenced in the table, the following studies identified high CD4 count as a barrier to adherence: [27, 28, 32, 34, 43]
dSome studies examined multiple outcomes related to ART adherence. Pharmacy records included prescription refill data. Electronic monitoring was conducted via Medication Electronic Monitoring System (MEMS)