| Literature DB >> 32746881 |
Tiarney D Ritchwood1,2, Vincenzo Malo3, Cameron Jones4, Isha W Metzger5, Millicent Atujuna6, Rebecca Marcus6, Donaldson F Conserve7, Lara Handler8, Linda-Gail Bekker6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adolescents living with HIV (ALWH) who transition from pediatric to adult care face several challenges that increase their risk of experiencing treatment interruptions and being lost to HIV care with resultant increased morbidity and mortality. To date, few studies have examined their outcomes post-healthcare transition (HCT), precluding the development and dissemination of evidence-based interventions aimed at retaining ALWH in HIV care both during and after HCT. We conducted a systematic review to synthesize the outcomes of ALWH post-HCT to provide suggestions for future directions.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Adult; HIV; Healthcare transition; Outcomes; Pediatric
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32746881 PMCID: PMC7398377 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09312-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 4.135
Fig. 1Flow diagram of literature reviewed for a systematic review of the treatment outcomes among adolescents transitioning from pediatric to adult care. A total of 1972 relevant titles were assessed. After removing duplicates and unrelated titles and abstracts, 1064 relevant manuscripts were identified. Of these only 85 studies focused on healthcare transition and 24 focused on HCT outcomes among adolescents living with HIV
Study description table
| Authors | Location/Design | Population | Retention in HIV Care | Viral Load (VL)/CD4+ count | Mortality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Davies et al., 2017 [ | • Cape Town, South Africa • Longitudinal • PHIV • Setting: two hospitals and two primary care clinics | • Mage at transition = 10–19 years • • Sex = 53% female • Duration of follow up = 3.3 years | Evaluated longitudinal outcomes of ALWH post-HCT and found that 81% had a successful transition. One year later, retention was 90% but declined to 84% at 3 years. Retention was lower in adolescents 15–19-year compared with those who were 10–14-years of age up to 2 years post-HCT although at 3 years figures for both groups were similar. | 78% percent of patients were virologically suppressed during transition 64% of these patients had CD4 > 500 cells/μL. | None reported |
| Fish et al., 2014 [ | • UK & Ireland • Longitudinal • PHIV • Setting: outpatient clinics, data from network of health professionals | • Median age at HCT for 11 deaths = 17 years • Median age at death after HCT = 21 years • Race/ethnicity: 82% Black African; 18% White European • • Sex = not reported | Not applicable | At death, the median CD4 count was 27 cells/μL. While 5 patients were on ART, only 2 had a VL < 50 HIV-1 RNA copies/mL. | Conducted a multicenter audit to assess the number of deaths and associated factors among PHIV after HCT. A total of 11 participants died during assessment period of 5 years. Causes included suicide (n = 2), AIDS ( |
| Griffith et al., 2019 [ | • United States • Retrospective cohort • PHIV and nPHIV with at least one visit in adult clinic after HCT • Setting: 2 urban HIV care programs | • • Sex = 62% female • Race = 81% African American • 75% on ARTs before HCT | Evaluated retention in care, CD4 count and VL post-HCT. A total of 79 (89%) patients were successfully retained in care one year after transition, of which 53 had stable or improved viral loads. | 57% of participants had viral loads less than 400 copies/mL pre-transition. 51% of patients were virally suppressed post-HCT. | None reported |
| Haghighat et al., 2019 [ | • Eastern Cape province, South Africa • Longitudinal • Prospective cohort • Setting: health care facilities | • Sex = 54.3% female • Median age at study enrollment = 13 years • 26.1% horizontally infected • Median age at ART initiatio | Characterized clinical outcomes and mobility through VL, mortality, and LTFU. 550 persons (57.8%) started ART in a pediatric setting, of which 35.3% transitioned to adult care. Median age at transition was 14 years old. Of the 35.3% to transition, 91.2% were retained in care 18 months later. 84 ALWH (8.8%) were LTFU, defined as missing all appointments within the past 3 months and being untraceable. | Of the 143 ALWH to transition to adult care who had pre and post HCT VL data, there was no change in . | Out of those who transitioned to adult care 7 died (3.6%). |
| Hansudewechakul et al., 2015 [ | • Chiang Rai province, Thailand • Longitudinal • PHIV • Setting: public hospital | • Age = not reported • Race/ethnicity: 100% Thai • • Sex = not reported • 1–5 years post-HCT | Evaluated the outcomes of PHIV after completion of a voluntary HCT camp intended to prepare PHIV for adult care. PHIV were transitioned to adult care in groups rather than individually to facilitate adherence modeling and social support. A total of 73% of ALWH were retained in care 2 to 5 years post-HCT depending on when they were enrolled., while13% were LTFU. | Pre-HCT biologic data were not reported. Post-HCT, 37 had a VL < 40. The remaining youth had VLs between 40 and 1999 (n = 6) and > 2000 (n = 9). | Four participants died post-HCT. |
| Hussen et al., 2017 [ | • Atlanta, Georgia, United States • Retrospective cohort study • PHIV & BHIV • Setting: HIV clinic, public hospital | • Median age at last pediatric visit = 23.8 years (22.0–24.8 years) • • Sex = 62. 5% male • Race/ethnicity: 93% Black African; 3% Mixed; 2% White | Evaluated retention in HIV pre-, during and post-HCT. Of 72 ALWH, 89% were retained in HIV care one year post-HCT and 56% were in care 2 years post-HCT. ALWH with suppressed viremia during the last pediatric visit were more likely to be suppressed post-HCT. | Of all transitioned ALWH, 49 had suppressed viremia one year post-HCT, or 53% of ALWH. | None reported |
| Izzo et al., 2018 [ | • Brescia, Northern Italy. • Retrospective • PHIV • Setting: outpatient clinic | • Mage at HCT =18 years • • Sex = 37.5% male • 75% were Italian. | None reported | Described the viro-immunology outcome of PHIV. Pre-HCT, the median CD4+ T-cell count was 534 cell/lL, 62.5% had HIV-RNA < 50 copies/mL and 25% had HIV-RNA 50–10,000 copies/mL, and 12.5% had HIV-RNA > 10, 000 copies/mL. Post-HCT, 5 patients were LTFU (median 52 months), median CD4+ T-cell count was 716 cell/lL, 100% had HIV-RNA < 50 copies/mL, 0% had HIV-RNA 50–10,000 copies/mL and HIV-RNA > 10, 000 copies/mL. | None reported |
| Judd et al., 2017 [ | • United Kingdom • Longitudinal • PHIV • Setting: clinic settings, cohort data | • Median age pre-HCT = 17 years (16–18 years) • Race/ethnicity: 80% Black African; 11% White; 9% other • • Sex = 53% female • 15.4 years duration of total follow up | Not reported | Median CD4+ count at 12 months pre-HCT was 465 cells/mm3 and post-HCT was 460 cells/mm3. Pre-HCT, 21% had CD4 < 200 cells/mm3 at least once in the 12-month periods, post-HCT 23% had CD4 < 200 cells/mm3 at least once in the 12-month periods. For those on ART pre-HCT 28% had two consecutive VLs (≤6 months apart) > 400 copies/mL or one VL > 10,000 copies/mL in the 12 month periods, post-HCT 29% had two consecutive VLs (≤6 months apart) > 400 copies/mL or one VL > 10,000 copies/mL in the 12 month. Pre- HCT, 47% had two consecutive VLs > 400 copies/mL or one VL > 10,000 copies/mL in the 12-month periods regardless of ART status which was 52% post-HCT. | Clinic records indicated that 7 participants died in adult care. Causes of death were AIDS ( |
| Kakkar et al., 2016 [ | • Québec, Canada • Descriptive • PHIV • Setting: HIV clinic | • Mage = 22 (19–25 years) • Sex = 40% male • • Race/ethnicity: not reported • M = 3.6 years post HCT (range 1.1–6.8 years) | The researchers reviewed the clinic records of PHIV who had transitioned to adult care. Of the 25 who agreed to study participation, 76% were retained in HIV care at follow-up of one year post-HCT or later and eight were LTFU. | Pre-HCT, 64% had a CD4 count > 500 cells/mm3, 16% between 200 and 500 cells/mm3, and 20% were immunosuppressed with a CD4 count < 200 cells/mm3. Moreover, fewer PHIV had VLs greater than 500 cells/mm3 (decreased from 64 to 29%). When PHIV were asked how often they missed drug doses in the past month, 40% reported no missed doses, 28% reported occasional missed doses, 16% reported frequently missed doses, and 12% had stopped all ARV therapy. Of the 16 PHIV for which VL data were available, 9 remained undetectable, one had an increase in VL to a detectable status, and 6 remained detectable. | Of the 45 who transitioned, 4 were deceased. |
| Kowalska et al., 2019 [ | • Warsaw, Poland • Cross-sectional • Setting: pediatric health care | • • Median age at transfer = 19.1 years • Median age at diagnosis = 53 months • Median post-HCT follow-up = 1.9 (0.7–4.5) years | Most ALWH (83%) were retained in care at a median follow up time of 1.9 years post-HCT. Four patients were LTFU, three who were not virally suppressed in pediatric care and one who was virally suppressed in pediatric care. | Twenty-one percent were virologically suppressed pre-HCT. Of these, seventeen maintained suppressed viremia post-HCT. Among ALWH who were not virologically suppressed pre-HCT ( | One out of the 9 patients who were virologically non-supressed in pediatric care died post-HCT from drug overdose. |
| Maturo et al., 2015 [ | • Miami, Florida, United States • Longitudinal & Descriptive • BHIV & PHIV • Setting: HIV clinic, university hospital | • Mage at HCT follow up = 17.55 (18–29 years) • Race/ethnicity: 84% African American; 13% Hispanic; 3% Mixed race • • Sex = 44.8% males, 2.6% transgender • Did not report years post-HCT | Data are from a HCT program for PHIV (11%) and BHIV (89%) that consisted of five distinct phases. The authors reviewed the medical records of individuals who participated in the program and results indicated that 47% completed the program and were retained in adult care 1 year post-HCT. Among those who did not complete the program, 8% were still in the program. | Pre- HCT, ALWHs’ mean CD4+ count was 479 cells/mm3 (range = 4–1255) and their mean HIV RNA level was 18,528 copies/mL (range: 130–114,800). About 26% reported adherence issues. Post-HCT, 22% reported adherence issues. Their mean CD4+ count was 604 cells/mm3 (range = 185–1124) and their mean HIV RNA level was 11,488 copies/mL. Follow-up data were only available for seven of the non-completers and indicated that 29% reported adherence issues. Their mean CD4+ count was 603 cells/mm3 (range = 4–1, 1255) and their mean HIV RNA level was 15,294 copies/mL (range: 395–66,683). | None reported |
| Tassiopoulos et al., 2019 [ | • United States • Cohort study • PHIV | • • Median age = 21.5 years • Sex = 61% female • Race = 68% Black | 124 participants transitioned to adult care. Mean age at last pediatric visit was 21.7 years. 59% of those who transitioned missed an ARV dose in the past 3 months, as compared to 60% who did not transition. | Median CD4 count was 402 cells/mm3 for those who transitioned compared to 535 cells/mm3 for all 455 patients prior. Of the 124 who transitioned, 56% had at least one instance of unsuppressed VL prior to transition compared to 31% with an unsuppressed VL within a year post transition | None reported |
| Westling et al., 2016 [ | • Stockholm, Sweden • Cross-sectional & Longitudinal VPHIV & BHIV • Setting: transition clinic, university hospital | • Mage = 19 (17–25 years) • • Sex = 50% male • 2 years post-HCT | Described a HCT program in which PHIV/BHIV met with physicians, nurses and counselors from a pediatric clinic for 1–2 years. Twenty-nine reported at the 2-year follow-up, of which 23 underwent HCT. | Prior to HCT, 88% were on ART for a median of 9 years, 6% experienced treatment interruption, and 75% had a history of adherence issues. Participants experienced mutations against at least two drug classes (25%), treatment resistance requiring changes to medication (40%), only 14% had a CD4 cell count that was less than < 350 × 106/L, and 90% (27 of 30) of those on ART had a VL of < 50 copies/mL. At the 2-year follow-up, 90% (26 of 29) of those on ART had a VL of < 50 copies/mL, 92% had a VL < 50 copies/mL, and 19% experienced treatment interruptions. | None reported |
| Weijsenfeld et al., 2016 [ | • Amsterdam, Netherlands • Longitudinal • PHIV & BHIV • Setting: university medical centers | • Mage at diagnosis = 8 (3–13 years); Mage at transition = 19 (18–20 years) • • Sex = 42% male • 1–6 years post-HCT | Evaluated virological and social outcomes of PHIV/BHIV prior to and after HCT, and identified factors associated with VF. Results indicated that 86% were retained in HIV care and 14% were LTFU at a mean follow-up time of 1.5 years. | Youth reporting low (OR, 3.32 [95% CI, 1.39–7.92], | None reported |
| Wiener et al., 2011 [ | • United States • Mixed methods: pre/post HCT • PHIV & BHIV • Setting: medical research facility | • Mage = 22 (18–31 years) • • Sex = 51% male • 4 years post clinic closure | Described ALWH (18+ years) participating in a pediatric HIV care program. Data were gathered between September and December 2008, which is the time when the program was terminated. Follow-up occurred in 2008. Results indicated that 55 ALWH (93%) had been retained in HIV care, of which 42 (71%) transitioned to adult care. Of those who experienced HCT, 45% reported that the transition was more difficult than expected; 86% were on ART; and 45% reported difficulties adhering to treatment. | There appeared to be a trend towards lower CD4 counts for those who experienced HCT with pre-HCT mean of 575 and post-HCT mean of 504. The difference in change was not significant. | |
| Xia et al., 2018 [ | • New York City, United States • Retrospective pre-post study • Matched exposed/unexposed nested cohort study • PHIV • Setting: NYC HIV surveillance registry | • • Sex = 52.7% female • Mean age of transition = 22 years old | Reported transition duration, retention in care, and pre-post CD4 cell count. A total of 735 ALWH transitioned to adult care. Of those for which 3-year follow-up data were available after the first adult visit, 367 ALWH, (94.7%) remained in care. | One year post-HCT, 337/694 (48.6%) were virally suppressed. In year 2, 301/589 (51.1%) were suppressed, and in year 3247/477 (51.8%) were suppressed. | 41 persons died in the first year of transition. 82.9% were from HIV-related diseases. |
Note: PHIV adolescents with perinatal HIV infection, BHIV adolescents with behavioral HIV infection, which includes transfusion, IV drug use, and sexual routes of transmission, HCT healthcare transition, VF virologic failure, LTFU lost to follow-up care
Qualitative studies
| Authors | Location/Design | Population | Themes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hussen et al., 2019 [ | • United States • Qualitative semi-structured focus groups | • N = 24 • Providers in four groups (2 from pediatric clinic, 2 from adult clinic) | Three types of HCTs were described: • Ideal transitions would include HCT planning a year in advance and prepare ALWH for a major shift. • Abrupt transitions that result from medical needs are linked to treatment non-adherence • De Facto transitions where adolescents disengage in care and then re-engage in care after turning 25 years old Poor engagement in pediatric care was linked to poor engagement in adult care. |
| Bundock et al., 2011 [ | • Australia, UK • Cross-sectional study comparing patient satisfaction at a U.K. HIV transition clinic and an Australian diabetes transition clinic | • • Sex = 57% female • • Sex = 56% female | • 18/19 PHIV reported an easy transition process compared to 34/39 of those with diabetes who felt their transition to adult care was easy. • 13/19 PHIV and 28/39 diabetes patients reported their HCT had a positive impact on their health. • All PHIV reported the transition clinic to be preferable to the adult clinic • The most important concerns were the staff’s ability to communicate with young people, preparation for the physical transition and transition in responsibility, and feeling comfortable discussing personal health. |
| Katusiime et al., 2013 [ | • Uganda • Thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with adolescents post-transition | • • Patients at least 1 year after HCT | The study identified six major themes: • Adjustment to health care providers • Adult clinic logistics • Positive attributes of adult clinic, like specialized care • Transfer to other health centers • Perceived sense of stigma • Patient recommendations for staff in adult clinic such as gaining experience working in transition or pediatric clinic |
| Machado et al., 2016 [ | • Brazil • Thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with adolescents | • N = 16 ALWH who were part of transition protocol • Sex = 50% female • Median age = 17 years | • Participants noted turning points in their lives related to their transition and identified social support as a pivotal factor to dealing with it. • The bond between pediatric providers and patients was another important aspect of care, so HCTs brought concerns about disruption and abandonment. • Adult care was negatively perceived. • ALWH recommended more time to adapt during the HCT process and more communication between providers in both settings. |
| Miles et al., 2004 [ | • UK • Thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with adolescents | • N = 7 • Median age = 16 years | Themes were identified based on transition phase (pre, during, post) with subthemes identified for each. • Pre-transition: Participants identified the benefit of introductions to adult-care providers and anxieties about care coordination and the adult environment • The actual transition: Four participants found the transition easy, while three delayed their transition due to greater trust in pediatric clinic • Post-transition: All participants identified benefits of transition, most identified importance of losing relationships with pediatric clinic physicians, and recommendations were made about pre-transition visits and youth-friendly environments. |
| Sharma et al., 2014 [ | • USA • Grounded theory analysis of structured interviews with adolescents and their guardians | • • Mean age of patients = 18 years | Three major themes were identified: • Lack of preparation for the HCT expressed by both youth and caregivers • Anxiety about changing providers and health care settings • Concerns about increase in responsibility with time |
| Valenzuela et al. 2011 [ | • USA • Thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with adolescents | • N = 10 patients who completed HCT • Mean age = 26.7 years | Six themes were identified: • Providers acting as family in adolescent care • Adolescent care as a time to learn about the disease and grow • Anxiety and lack of preparation for HCT Recommendations for improving HCT • Change in experience of care with shift to adult care • Opportunities for growth in adult care |
| Le Roux et al., 2017 [ | • France • Thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with health providers | • | Three major problems during transition that were identified included: trouble accepting the disease, communication challenges in linking from pediatric to adult care, and difficulty navigating the new health care environment. |