| Literature DB >> 31905209 |
Chelsea E Canan1, Marika E Waselewski1, Ava Lena D Waldman1, George Reynolds2, Tabor E Flickinger1, Wendy F Cohn3, Karen Ingersoll4, Rebecca Dillingham1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: PositiveLinks (PL) is a smartphone-based platform designed in partnership with people living with HIV (PLWH) to improve engagement in care. PL provides daily medication reminders, check-ins about mood and stress, educational resources, a community message board, and an ability to message providers. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of up to 24 months of PL use on HIV viral suppression and engagement in care and to examine whether greater PL use was associated with improved outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31905209 PMCID: PMC6944340 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0226870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline participant characteristics.
| <48% PL Use at 1 Month N = 36 | ≥48% PL Use at 1 Month N = 91 | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 39.8 (14.8) | 39.0 (12.0) | 0.76 | |
| 0.89 | |||
| Male | 25 (69.4) | 58 (63.7) | |
| Female | 10 (27.8) | 30 (33.0) | |
| Transgender M-F | 1 (2.8) | 2 (2.2) | |
| Missing | 0 (0) | 1 (1.1) | |
| 0.96 | |||
| White non-Hispanic | 10 (27.8) | 28 (30.8) | |
| Black non-Hispanic | 19 (52.8) | 48 (52.8) | |
| Hispanic | 2 (5.6) | 5 (5.5) | |
| Other | 5 (13.9) | 10 (11.0) | |
| 0.87 | |||
| Public | 16 (44.4) | 37 (40.7) | |
| Private | 9 (25.0) | 29 (31.9) | |
| None | 10 (27.8) | 21 (23.1) | |
| Other | 1 (2.8) | 4 (4.4) | |
| 0.60 | |||
| <50% FPL | 17 (47.2) | 48 (52.8) | |
| 50–100% FPL | 9 (25.0) | 15 (16.5) | |
| ≥100% FPL | 10 (27.8) | 25 (27.5) | |
| Missing | 0 (0) | 3 (3.3) | |
| 0.30 | |||
| Less than high school | 9 (25.0) | 17 (18.7) | |
| High school or equivalent | 18 (50.0) | 35 (38.5) | |
| More than high school | 9 (25.0) | 37 (40.7) | |
| Missing | 0 (0) | 2 (2.2) | |
| 0.78 | |||
| Low | 2 (5.6) | 3 (3.3) | |
| Moderate | 10 (27.8) | 30 (33.0) | |
| High | 24 (66.7) | 56 (61.5) | |
| Missing | 0 (0) | 2 (2.2) | |
| 105.0 (15.9) | 99.7 (19.5) | 0.15 | |
| Missing, n (%) | 0 (0) | 2 (2.7) | |
| 44.4 (14.4) | 43.7 (11.4) | 0.82 | |
| Missing, n (%) | 11 (30.6) | 41 (45.1) | |
| Starting HIV care self-efficacy | 79.5 (25.0) | 83.8 (16.4) | 0.44 |
| Staying in care self-efficacy | 175.8 (31.1) | 176.9 (24.7) | 0.87 |
| HIV appointment self-efficacy | 143.2 (37.9) | 146.7 (26.8) | 0.68 |
| HIV medication self-efficacy | 155.8 (25.4) | 155.3 (28.4) | 0.93 |
| Missing, n (%) | 11 (30.6) | 39 (42.9) | |
| 0.61 | |||
| Yes | 5 (13.9) | 17 (18.7) | |
| No | 31 (86.1) | 74 (81.3) | |
| 94.5 (95.6) | 87.0 (96.6) | 0.70 | |
| 0.16 | |||
| Yes | 17 (47.2) | 58 (63.7) | |
| No | 18 (50.0) | 31 (34.1) | |
| Missing | 1 (2.8) | 2 (3.7) | |
| 0.84 | |||
| Yes | 21 (58.3) | 55 (60.4) | |
| No | 15 (41.7) | 36 (39.6) |
Table 1 displays baseline characteristics of the study sample (N = 127) by PL usage. PL use was determined by participant’s average response rate to three daily queries (mood, stress, and medication adherence) in the first month of PL enrollment.
1Scores on the Berger HIV Stigma scale range from 40 (low stigma) to 160 (high stigma)
2Scores on the Social Support Appraisals Scale range from 23 to 92, with a lower score indicative of a greater level of appraised social support
3HIV care self-efficacy scores range from 0 to 100 for starting HIV care and from 0 to 210 for staying in care, appointment self-efficacy, and medication self-efficacy, with higher scores indicative of greater self-efficacy
4Recent HIV diagnosis defined as within 6 months of PL enrollment
App utilization over time.
| N | Meds | Mood | Stress | CMB | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Response Rate (SD) | Mean Response Rate (SD) | Mean Response Rate (SD) | Mean Posts per Person (SD) | ||
| 127 | -- | -- | -- | -- | |
| 98 | 61.3 (38.1) | 60.0 (38.8) | 59.9 (38.8) | 19.3 (66.2) | |
| 65 | 40.2 (41.7) | 39.5 (41.8) | 39.6 (41.7) | 7.2 (16.6) | |
| 45 | 52.8 (38.4) | 52.7 (38.5) | 53.0 (38.7) | 8.2 (13.5) | |
| 38 | 44.9 (38.0) | 44.2 (37.5) | 44.2 (37.7) | 14.9 (36.4) |
Table 2 shows the cohort response rate percentage for daily queries (medication, mood, and stress) and number of community board posts. Rates represent the average in the six-month period and are not cumulative (i.e. 6-month rates represent data from baseline through six months; 12-month rates represent data from six months through twelve months). Rates are only calculated for members who are missing less than 2 weeks of app data during the 6-month interval.
Fig 1Change in clinical outcomes over time.
Fig 1 shows the change in the viral suppression and engagement in care from baseline to each 6-month follow-up period. PL users are included in the sample for each time point during which they were still enrolled in PL. PL enrollment ended when members finished the study (N = 26), dropped out (N = 4), died (N = 2), or reached the end of the data collection period (N = 95). Viral suppression is defined as having a viral load <200 copies/mL. Engagement in care is defined as having attended 2 or more HIV appointments separated by at least 90 days within the past year. Increases in both viral suppression and engagement in care were statistically significant at each follow-up period compared to baseline (p<0.05).
Clinical outcomes by PL use over time.
| Low PL Use | High PL Use | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 33 | 78.8 | 53 | 94.6 | 0.03 | |
| 30 | 76.7 | 23 | 87.0 | 0.48 | |
| 15 | 86.7 | 22 | 90.9 | 0.99 | |
| 13 | 69.2 | 18 | 94.4 | 0.13 | |
| 39 | 87.2 | 59 | 93.2 | 0.48 | |
| 38 | 73.7 | 27 | 88.9 | 0.21 | |
| 22 | 77.3 | 23 | 95.7 | 0.10 | |
| 20 | 75.0 | 18 | 88.9 | 0.41 | |
Table 3 shows the observed outcomes by level of PL use. PL members are included in a given time point for which they were actively enrolled in PL, defined as receiving daily queries for at least 5.5 months of the 6-month interval. Members who responded to ≥48% of daily queries in the prior 6-months are classified as high PL users; those with <48% response rates are low users. Viral suppression is defined as having a viral load <200 copies/mL. Engagement in care is defined as having attended 2 or more HIV appointments separated by at least 90 days within the past year.
Time to first viral suppression by PL use.
| Unadjusted Hazard Ratio (95% CI) N = 37 | Adjusted Hazard Ratio | |
|---|---|---|
| Low | Ref | Ref |
| High | 1.69 (0.77–3.71) | 2.09 (0.64–6.88) |
Among patients who were not virally suppressed at baseline, patients were followed from their date of PL enrollment until the first date on which they had a lab value indicating viral suppression (HIV viral load <200 copies/mL) or the date of censoring. Patients were censored for the following reasons: one year with no lab value, death, dropout, study completion, or administrative censoring on September 30, 2017. PL use is updated on a monthly basis and is calculated as the response rate to daily queries. A low query response rate is <48% and a high query response rate is ≥48%. PL use is lagged such that PL use in the month prior to the event of interest or censoring is treated as the exposure; patients who achieved viral suppression within the first month of PL enrollment were therefore considered unexposed and were not included in the analysis.
1Adjusted hazard ratio is adjusted for the following covariates: race (Black non-Hispanic, White non-Hispanic, Hispanic, Other/unknown), education (less than high school, high school or equivalent, greater than high school), and baseline perceived stress (low, moderate, high). Final adjusted model was chosen based on lowest AIC.