| Literature DB >> 31305206 |
Julie L Priest1, Debra E Irwin2, Kristin A Evans2, Alan K Oglesby1, Brenna L Brady2.
Abstract
Despite advances in antiretroviral therapy (ART), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) remains a significant issue in the United States. Early diagnosis, continuous treatment access/adherence, and long-term care engagement help patients benefit fully from ART; however, a shortfall in care engagement remains, potentially leading to poorer health outcomes. This analysis benchmarks rates of health care quality and process measures to identify areas for improvement. This retrospective, claims-based, real-world cohort study assessed the percentage of prevalent (existing) and incident (newly diagnosed) patients with HIV with commercial or public health insurance meeting 4 National Quality Forum (NQF)-endorsed, 1 Pharmacy Quality Alliance (PQA), and 3 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) measures over a 4-year period. Most prevalent patients consistently met the NQF-endorsed prescribed ART and gaps in visits measures. Longer-term visit frequency measure rates were well below the 90% Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS target. Proportion of prevalent patients meeting each NQF-endorsed measure was maintained/increased with increasing age in 2015-2016. Substantially fewer incident patients than prevalent patients met NQF-endorsed measures across all measurement periods, particularly for visit frequency (32%-51%). PQA ART adherence was low (36%-73%). CDC receipt of care rates were high (83%-92%), whereas retention in care rates were low (67%-72%) among prevalent patients. For incident patients, linkage to care rates were consistently low (21%-44%). This study benchmarks current US HIV care engagement and highlights the need for improvement in early care engagement, ART adherence and long-term retention of care among patients with HIV.Entities:
Keywords: ART; HIV; adherence; health care engagement; quality measures; real world
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31305206 PMCID: PMC7074887 DOI: 10.1089/pop.2019.0052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Popul Health Manag ISSN: 1942-7891 Impact factor: 2.459
FIG. 1.Study design. ART, antiretroviral therapy; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus.
Health Care Quality and Adherence Measures
| Source | Measure name | Definition | Patient eligibility criteria | Measurement periods |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV Medical Visit Frequency | ≥1 non-diagnostic, non-ER outpatient medical visit for HIV in each 6-month period over a 24-month measurement period, with ≥60 days between visits. | ≥1 non-ER outpatient medical visit for HIV in the first 6 months of the measurement period, with continuous enrollment in the database for the entire measurement period and the 6 months prior. | Assessed between January 1, 2013, and December 31, 2014, and January 1, 2015, and December 31, 2016. | |
| Gap in HIV Medical Visits | No absence of a non-diagnostic, non-ER outpatient medical visit for HIV in the second 6 months of a given 12-month measurement period. | ≥1 non-ER outpatient medical visit for HIV in the first 6 months of the measurement period, with continuous enrollment in the database for the entire measurement period and the 6 months prior. | Assessed during each full calendar year of the study (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016). | |
| HIV Viral Load Testing[ | HIV viral load test ordered during the 12-month measurement period. | ≥1 non-ER outpatient medical visit for HIV in the first 6 months of the measurement period, with continuous enrollment in the database for the entire measurement period and the 6 months prior. | Assessed during each full calendar year of the study (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016). | |
| Prescription of HIV ART | Prescription for at least 1 ART during a given 12-month measurement period. | ≥1 non-ER outpatient medical visit for HIV in the first 6 months of the measurement period, with continuous enrollment in the database for the entire measurement period and the 6 months prior. | Assessed during each full calendar year of the study (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016). | |
| Adherence to HIV ART | Patients with ≥90% of days covered by an ART regimen in the 12-month measurement period; a variation of this outcome was ≥80% of days covered by an ART regimen. | HIV-1 diagnosis, ≥2 fills of ≥2 distinct ART agents; combination ART drugs were counted as 2 drugs. | Assessed from the date of the first ART regimen prescription fill in the measurement period to the end of the measurement period for each of the 4 full calendar years in the study. | |
| Receipt of care | Patients with existing (prevalent) HIV ≥13 years of age with ≥1 viral load or CD4 T-cell test within the 12-month measurement period. | Persons ≥13 years of age at the start of the measurement period, with a non-diagnostic claim for HIV in the 6 months prior to the measurement period, who were continuously enrolled in the database from the date of diagnosis to the end of the measurement period. | Assessed during each full calendar year of the study (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016). | |
| Retention in care | Patients with existing (prevalent) HIV ≥13 years of age and ≥2 viral load or CD4 T-cell test, ≥3 months apart, within the 12-month measurement period. | Persons ≥13 years of age at the start of the measurement period, with a non-diagnostic claim for HIV in the 6 months prior to the measurement period, who were continuously enrolled in the database from the date of diagnosis to the end of the measurement period. | Assessed during each full calendar year of the study (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016). | |
| Linkage to care | Newly diagnosed (within the first 3 months of each calendar year; incident patients) patients with HIV ≥13 years of age with ≥1 viral load or CD4 T-cell test within 1 month of the HIV diagnosis date. | Persons ≥13 years of age at the time of diagnosis, with continuous enrollment in the database for the entire measurement period and the 6 months prior. | Assessed during each full calendar year of the study (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016). |
This measure was modified from the NQF HIV Viral Load Suppression measure because of the lack of laboratory test results in administrative claims data and reports the proportion of patients who had evidence of a viral load test being performed.
ART, antiretroviral therapy; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; ER, emergency room; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; NQF, National Quality Forum; PQA, Pharmacy Quality Alliance.
Patient Demographics for the 2016 Measurement Period Population[a]
| Commercial/Medicare plan | Medicaid plan | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalent (n = 23,937) | Incident (n = 737) | Prevalent (n = 9261) | Incident (n = 489) | |
| Age, mean (SD) | 48.0 (11.4) | 41.1 (14.6) | 44.7 (12.5) | 39.0 (14.7) |
| Age group, n (%) | ||||
| <18 years | 109 (0.5) | 13 (1.8) | 303 (3.3) | 34 (7.0) |
| 18–34 years | 3170 (13.2) | 265 (36.0) | 1686 (18.2) | 151 (30.9) |
| 35–44 years | 4534 (18.9) | 138 (18.7) | 1848 (20.0) | 92 (18.8) |
| 45–54 years | 9003 (37.6) | 187 (25.4) | 3187 (34.4) | 134 (27.4) |
| 55–64 years | 6139 (25.6) | 99 (13.4) | 2218 (23.9) | 77 (15.7) |
| ≥65 years | 982 (4.1) | 35 (4.7) | 19 (0.2) | 1 (0.2) |
| Male, n (%) | 19,737 (82.5) | 561 (76.1) | 4449 (48.0) | 244 (49.9) |
Assessed on January 1, 2016 unless otherwise stated.
SD, standard deviation.
FIG. 2.Proportion of prevalent patients with commercial, Medicarea or Medicaid insurance achieving NQF-endorsed measures. aViral load test claims data were determined to be incomplete for patients with Medicare insurance plans because of billing/reimbursement practices between Medicare and Supplemental Medicare. Values in brackets indicate total number of patients in each group (N) who were eligible for the measure. ART, antiretroviral therapy; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus, NQF, National Quality Forum.
FIG. 3.Proportion of patients achieving NQF-endorsed measures analyzed by age group (years) for prevalent patients with commercial/Medicare and Medicaid insurancea in 2016. aData for patients ≥65 years of age with Medicaid insurance are not presented because of low sample size. bVisit frequency was assessed over a 24-month measurement period (2015–2016). Values in brackets indicate total number of patients (N) in each group who were eligible for the measure. ART, antiretroviral therapy; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus, NQF, National Quality Forum.
FIG. 4.Proportion of prevalent (A) and incident (B) patients with PQA PDC for ART ≥90% by commercial/Medicare and Medicaid insurance status. Values in brackets indicate total number of patients in each group (N) who were eligible for the measure. ART, antiretroviral therapy; PDC, proportion of days covered; PQA, Pharmacy Quality Alliance.