| Literature DB >> 35231047 |
Pia Müller1, Luís Velez Lapão1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cotrimoxazole and isoniazid preventive therapy (CPT, IPT) have been shown to be efficacious therapies for the prevention of opportunistic infections and tuberculosis (TB) among people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Despite governments' efforts to translate World Health Organization recommendations into practice, implementation remains challenging. This review aimed to explore and compare CPT and IPT with respect to similarities and differences of barriers identified across high TB/HIV burden countries. A secondary objective was to identify facilitators for implementing both preventive therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35231047 PMCID: PMC8887777 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251612
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Main characteristics of the studies included in this review.
| First author [citation] | Year of publica-tion | Country | Study type | Study subjects | Data collection approach | Treat-ment of interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adepoju [ | 2020 | Nigeria | Retrospective cohort study | Patients | Record review | IPT |
| Aisu [ | 1995 | Uganda | Operational Assessment | Patients, Facilities | Clinic attendance monitoring, Adherence (Pill count), Interviews, Review of key documents | IPT |
| Ansa [ | 2014 | Ghana | Comparative research | Facilities | Record review | CPT |
| Catalani [ | 2014 | Kenya | Mixed methods assessment | Providers, Other stake-holders, Facilities | Key informant interviews, Qualitative field notes of site observations, Interviewer-administered survey, In-depth interviews | IPT |
| Chan [ | 2014 | Malawi, Uganda, Zimbabwe | Multi-country comparative study | Facilities | Interviewer administered survey, Record review | CPT |
| Chang [ | 2015 | Uganda | Randomized trial | Patients | Survey-based assessment | CPT |
| Durovni [ | 2010 | Brazil | Preliminary results of phased cluster randomized trial | Patients, Providers, Other stake-holders | Trial dataset record review, Interviews, Focus group discussion | IPT |
| Faust [ | 2020 | Ethiopia, Nigeria, India, Angola, Brazil, China, DRC, Indonesia, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Mozambique, Myanmar, South Africa, Tanzania, Thailand, Zambia, Zimbabwe | Survey | Countries | Survey (via email) | IPT |
| Gust [ | 2011 | Botswana | Sub-study of the Botswana IPT prevention trial | Patients | Interviews, Focus group discussion, Interviewer-administered survey | IPT |
| Horwood [ | 2010 | South Africa | Evaluation/ Cross-sectional descriptive study | Facilities | Record review, Survey-based interviews | CPT |
| Huerga [ | 2016 | Kenya, Swaziland | Two prospective cohort studies | Patients/ Facilities | Record review (cohort study data, clinic registers), Interviews, Observation | IPT |
| Jacobson [ | 2017 | South Africa | Qualitative study | Patients | Semi-structured interviews | IPT |
| Jarrett [ | 2019 | South Africa | Multi-method assessment | Providers, Patients | In-depth interviews, Record review | IPT |
| Kamuhabwa [ | 2015 | Tanzania | Retrospective descriptive study | Facilities, Caregivers, Providers | Record review, Interviewer-administered survey | CPT |
| Kamuhabwa [ | 2016 | Tanzania | Descriptive cross-sectional study | Patients, Providers, Facilities | Record review, Semi-structured interviews, self-administered questionnaires, Focus group discussion, Facility assessment | CPT |
| Khan [ | 2014 | South Africa | Diagnostic performance evaluation | Patients | TB screening questionnaire, Sputum specimens, Chest X-ray, Record review | IPT |
| Lai [ | 2019 | Ethiopia | Cross-sectional study | Providers | Interviewer-administered questionnaires | IPT |
| Lester [ | 2010 | South Africa | Qualitative methods study | Patients, Providers | In-depth interviews, Focus group discussion | IPT |
| Little [ | 2018 | Malawi | Sub-study of the CHEPETSA trial | Patients | Adherence (pills dispensed at each visit), Interviewer-administered questionnaires | IPT |
| Louwagie [ | 2012 | South Africa | Historical cohort study | Facilities | Record review | CPT |
| Luyirika [ | 2013 | Uganda | Retrospective case study | Facilities | Record review | CPT |
| McRobie [ | 2017 | Uganda | Facility-level policy implementation assessment | Facilities, Other stake-holders | Key document review, structured health facility survey, Key informant interviews | IPT |
| Meribe [ | 2020 | Nigeria | Assessment of a provider-focused intervention to increase IPT initiation and completion | Facilities | Review of routinely collected programme data, Health facility quality assessments | IPT |
| Mindachew [ | 2011 | Ethiopia | Analytical cross-sectional study | Patients | Interviewer-administered structured questionnaires, Adherence (self-report) | IPT |
| Mugomeri [ | 2018 | Lesotho | Qualitative study | Providers, Other stake-holders | Semi-structured interviews | CPT, IPT |
| Mugomeri [ | 2019 | Lesotho | Retrospective cohort study | Patients | Record review | IPT |
| Munseri [ | 2008 | Tanzania | Sub-study of the TB vaccine trial | Patients | Record review, Interviewer-administered questionnaires | IPT |
| Mwambete [ | 2013 | Tanzania | Serial clinical and cross-sectional resistance study | Patients | Stool collection for resistance profiling, Adherence (self-report) | CPT |
| Naikoba [ | 2017 | Uganda | Cluster-randomized trial | Providers, Facilities | Practical knowledge/ competence assessment, Record review | CPT |
| Ngamvithayapong [ | 1997 | Thailand | Prospective cohort study | Patients | Adherence (clinic attendance, pill count), Interviews, Focus group discussion | IPT |
| Okot-Chono [ | 2009 | Uganda | Record review, qualitative study | Districts, Patients, Providers, Community members | Record review, Focus group discussion, Key informant interviews, In-depth interviews | CPT, IPT |
| Okwera [ | 2015 | Uganda | Qualitative study | Patients | Focus group discussion | CPT |
| Reddy [ | 2020 | India | Mixed-methods study | Patients, Providers | Review of routinely collected programme data, In-depth interviews | IPT |
| Rowe [ | 2005 | South Africa | Record review, qualitative study | Patients, Providers | Record review, In-depth interviews | IPT |
| Selehelo [ | 2019 | South Africa | Qualitative study | Patients | In-depth interviews | IPT |
| Sibanda [ | 2015 | Zimbabwe | Qualitative study | Caregivers | In-depth interviews | CPT |
| Szakacs [ | 2006 | South Africa | Adherence assessment, Cross-sectional study | Patients | Adherence (urine-metabolite testing, Interviewer-administered questionnaire | IPT |
| Tram [ | 2019 | Uganda | Cross-sectional study (sub-study of SEARCH HIV test and treat trial) | Patients | Record review, Interviewer-administered survey | IPT |
| Van Ginderdeuren [ | 2019 | South Africa | Before-and-after study) | Facilities, Providers | Record review, Structured questionnaire survey | IPT |
| Wambiya [ | 2018 | Kenya | Qualitative study | Providers | In-depth interviews | IPT |
Abbreviations: CPT- cotrimoxazole preventive therapy; IPT—isoniazid preventive therapy, Providers—Healthcare providers or healthcare workers
Fig 2Metasummary: Barriers to cotrimoxazole preventive therapy for people living with HIV.
The graphic presents all main barrier themes identified in countries with a high burden of tuberculosis and HIV, assigned to the health system component from which the barrier theme arose, considering a seven component health system framework (modification of the WHO Framework for Action, 2010). Barrier themes identified in more than or equal to ten papers are presented with an exclamation mark. Numbers in brackets display the number of supporting papers. Total number of peer-reviewed papers included with barriers to cotrimoxazole in this review (N = 11).
Fig 3Metasummary: Barriers to isoniazid preventive therapy for people living with HIV.
The graphic presents all main barrier themes identified in countries with a high burden of tuberculosis and HIV, assigned to the health system component from which the barrier theme arose, considering a seven component health system framework (modification of the WHO Framework for Action, 2010). Barrier themes identified in more than or equal to ten papers are presented with an exclamation mark. Numbers in brackets display the number of supporting papers. Total number of peer-reviewed papers included with barriers to isoniazid in this review (N = 28).
Fig 4The preventive therapy cascade.
Abbreviations: TB—tuberculosis; HIV—human immunodeficiency virus; PLHIV- people living with HIV; IPT- isoniazid preventive therapy; CPT—cotrimoxazole preventive therapy.