| Literature DB >> 35246602 |
Isaac Derickk Kimera1, Christabellah Namugenyi2, Jeremy I Schwartz3,4, Douglas Joseph Musimbaggo2, Rebecca Ssenyonjo2, Praise Atukunda2, Gerald Mutungi5, Frank Mugabe5, Fortunate Ambangira2, Mary Mbuliro2, Rodgers Katwesigye2, Dinesh Neupane6,7, Isaac Ssinabulya4,8,9, Fred Collins Semitala2,8, Christian Delles7,10, Martin Muddu2.
Abstract
Multi-month dispensing (MMD) is a patient-centered approach in which stable patients receive medicine refills of three months or more. In this pre-post longitudinal study, we determined hypertension and HIV treatment outcomes in a cohort of hypertensive PLHIV at baseline and 12 months of receiving integrated MMD. At each clinical encounter, one healthcare provider attended to both hypertension and HIV needs of each patient in an HIV clinic. Among the 1,082 patients who received MMD, the mean age was 51 (SD = 9) years and 677 (63%) were female. At the start of MMD, 1,071(98.9%) patients had achieved HIV viral suppression, and 767 (73.5%) had achieved hypertension control. Mean blood pressure reduced from 135/87 (SD = 15.6/15.2) mmHg at the start of MMD to 132/86 (SD = 15.2/10.5) mmHg at 12 months (p < 0.0001). Hypertension control improved from 73.5% to 78.5% (p = 0.01) without a significant difference in the proportion of patients with HIV viral suppression at baseline and at 12 months, 98.9% vs 99.0% (p = 0.65). Patients who received MMD with elevated systolic blood pressure at baseline were less likely to have controlled blood pressure at 12 months (OR-0.9, 95% CI, 0.90,0.92). Overall, 1,043 (96.4%) patients were retained at 12 months. Integrated MMD for stable hypertensive PLHIV improved hypertension control and sustained optimal HIV viral suppression and retention of patients in care. Therefore, it is feasible to provide integrated MMD for both hypertension and HIV treatment and achieve dual control in the setting of sub-Saharan Africa.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35246602 PMCID: PMC8896410 DOI: 10.1038/s41371-022-00655-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hum Hypertens ISSN: 0950-9240 Impact factor: 3.012
Key elements of the implementation package for integrated hypertension and HIV care.
| Package component | Description |
|---|---|
| Healthy lifestyle counseling | Counseling on healthy lifestyle: smoking cessation, low salt intake, regular physical exercise, healthy diet, and ART adherence by HIV Peer counselor, nurses and clinicians. |
| A step-wise hypertension treatment protocol | Developed a single page, step-wise treatment protocol to guide integrated hypertension and HIV treatment. |
| Trainings | Trained all the healthcare providers at the clinic on the adapted and adopted WHO HEARTS-based protocol for hypertension management. |
| The trainings were delivered as part of the clinic’s schedule of continuous medical education sessions. | |
| Access to hypertension medicine and blood pressure machines | Procured and provided both and hypertension medicines to patients at no cost, and ART was supplied through the national supply chain systems. |
| Procured two additional Omron-M6 validated automated blood pressure machines to supplement the existing ones in the HIV clinic. | |
| Team-based care and task shifting | Peer counselors/expert clients screened for hypertension and provided healthy lifestyle and drug adherence counseling. |
| Nurses supplemented clinical officers and doctors to prescribe both hypertension medicine and ART for patients with no medical complaints. | |
| Systems for monitoring | Developed a hypertension register and an electronic database for integrated hypertension and HIV information. |
Fig. 1Algorithm for integrated management of hypertension and HIV, and patient entry into integrated multi-month dispensing.
The first and second panels describe screening, diagnosis and treatment of hypertension in the HIV clinic, while the third panel describes the criteria for receiving integrated multi-month dispensing. HTN hypertension, Amlo amlodipine, Val valsartan, HCTZ hydrochlorothiazide, VL viral load, ART anti-retroviral therapy.
Patient characteristics at the start of MMD (N = 1,082).
| Characteristics | Women ( | Men ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Age in yrs., (SD) | 49.7 (9.4) | 53.0 (9.4) | 0.002 |
| Age categories, yrs. (%) | |||
| 18–29 | 2 (0.3) | 1 (0.2) | 0.001 |
| 30–39 | 84 (12.4) | 25 (6.2) | |
| 40–49 | 250 (36.9) | 124 (30.6) | |
| ≥50 | 341 (50.4) | 255 (63.0) | |
| BP in mmHg, (SD) | |||
| Mean systolic BP | 133.1 (15.8) | 137.7 (14.8) | <0.0001 |
| Mean diastolic BP | 86.5 (9.9) | 86.7 (10.8) | 0.074 |
| % HTN control (Absolute number) | 77.1% (521) | 67.6% (273) | 0.001 |
| BMI in kg/m2, (%) | |||
| Underweight (<19.0) | 30 (4.4) | 27 (6.7) | 0.213 |
| Normal weight (19.0 to <25.0) | 217 (32.1) | 213 (52.6) | |
| Overweight (25.0 to <30.0) | 237 (35.0) | 125 (30.8) | |
| Obese (>30.0) | 193 (28.5) | 40 (9.9) | |
| ART regimen (%) | |||
| TDF-3TC-DTG | 486 (71.8) | 323 (79.7) | 0.005 |
| TDF-3TC-EFV | 85 (12.6) | 24 (5.9) | |
| ABC-3TC-EFV | 31 (4.6) | 13 (3.2) | |
| OTHERS | 75 (11.0) | 45 (11.2) | |
| Duration on ART (%) | |||
| <2 years | 10 (1.5) | 14 (3.5) | 0.114 |
| 3 to <5years | 76 (11.2) | 42 (10.3) | |
| 5 to <10years | 256 (37.8) | 176 (43.5) | |
| ≥10years | 335 (49.5) | 173 (42.7) | |
| Other comorbidities (%) | |||
| Diabetes mellitus | 39 (3.6) | 25 (2.3) | 0.593 |
| CKD - eGFR ≤60 ml/min/1.73m2 | |||
| CKD Stage 4/5 (0–30) | 2 (0.8) | 2 (1.3) | 0.213 |
| CKD Stage 3 (30–60) | 44 (17.1) | 16 (10.7) | |
BMI Body mass index, ART Antiretroviral therapy, eGRF Estimated Glomerular filtration rate, HTN Hypertension, CKD Chronic Kidney Disease, TDF Tenofovir, 3TC Lamivudine, DTG Dolutegravir, ABC Abacavir, EFV Efavirenz.
Hypertension and HIV treatment outcomes (N = 1,043).
| Outcome | Baseline (Start of MMD) | 12 months of MMD | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean systolic blood pressure, mmHg (SD) | 135 (15.6) | 132 (15.2) | <0.0001 |
| Mean diastolic blood pressure, mmHg (SD) | 87 (15.2) | 86 (10.5) | 0.021 |
| Patients with controlled hypertension (%) | 767 (73.5%) | 817 (78.3%) | 0.01 |
| Patients with controlled HIV (Viral load <1000 copies/ml) (%) | 1032 (98.9%) | 1036 (99%) | 0.65 |
Fig. 2Longitudinal trend of hypertension and HIV control during the 12 month follow-up.
The proportions are percentages of hypertensive PLHIV on multi-month dispensing with controlled hypertension and HIV.
Predictors of blood pressure control while receiving MMD (N = 1,043).
| Category | Adjusted Odds Ratio | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| Females | 0.696 | 0.534–0.906 | 0.007 |
| Age, years | |||
| 18–29 (Reference) | |||
| 30–39 | 1.586 | 0.285–8.823 | 0.598 |
| 40–49 | 1.847 | 0.342–9.974 | 0.476 |
| ≥50 | 1.831 | 0.341–9.835 | 0.481 |
| BP ranges | |||
| Systolic blood pressure | 0.914 | 0.903–0.925 | <0.0001 |
| Diastolic blood pressure | 0.994 | 0.977–1.010 | 0.473 |
| Duration on ART | |||
| <2 years (Reference) | |||
| 3 to <5years | 2.35 | 0.815–9.775 | 0.113 |
| 5 to <10years | 2.78 | 1.051–7.324 | 0.039 |
| ≥10years | 3.36 | 1.277–8.821 | 0.014 |
| Diabetes status | |||
| Non-diabetic | 0.85 | 0.476–1.530 | 0.594 |
| ART regimen | |||
| TDF-3TC-DTG (Reference) | |||
| TDF-3TC-EFV | 0.712 | 0.463–1.097 | 0.124 |
| ABC-3TC-EFV | 0.293 | 0.150–0.572 | <0.0001 |
| OTHERS | 0.894 | 0.591–1.352 | 0.597 |