220 likes | 394 Views
Retention and risk factors for attrition among adults in antiretroviral treatment programs in Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia Olivier Koole Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp ICRH-Mozambique. Study Team. Family Health International (FHI 360)
E N D
Retention and risk factors for attrition among adults in antiretroviral treatment programs in Tanzania, Uganda and ZambiaOlivier KooleInstitute of Tropical Medicine, AntwerpICRH-Mozambique
StudyTeam • Family Health International (FHI 360) • MuhimbiliUniversity of Health and Allied Sciences, Tanzania • Infectious Diseases Institute, Makerere University Medical School, Uganda • Tropical Diseases Research Centre, Zambia • Institute of Tropical Medicine, Belgium • Massachusetts General Hospital, USA • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA • Gideon Kwesigabo • Fred Wabwire-Mangen • Modest Mulenga • David Bangsberg • JorisMenten • Robert Colebunders • Sharon Tsui • Eric Van Praag • Kwasi Torpey • YaDiulMukadi • Leine Stuart • Julie Denison • Andrew Auld • Simon Agolory • Seymour Williams • Jonathan Kaplan • Aaron Zee
Context • Massive scale-up of ART: worldwide 8 million people on ART, 6.5 in sub-SaharanAfrica • Greatestincrease in coverage in SSA • Importance of retentionandadherenceforgoodclinicaloutcomes • Retention: critical determinant of adherenceand key indicator of quality of ART programs
Objectives Primary • To characterise the current level of retention of patients on ART across multiple programme settings Secondary • To identify important predictors of retention in care, including both individual risk factors and programmecharacteristics
TANZANIA ZAMBIA Study Population & Sites • Retrospective cohort study • StudyPopulation • 18 years and older at ART initiation at study site • Initiated 3 ARVs at least 6 months prior to data collection • Study sites • 3 countries • 6 sites per country, purposively selected UGANDA
Source of data • Retrospective cohort study – medicalchart review • April toAugust 2010, 250 medicalcharts/site randomlyselectedandreviewed: clinical records, laboratory register andpharmacylogbook • June to July 2011, Health Care Manager questionnaire at 18 sites for program characteristics
Sampling • Sampling frame: all patients ever started on ART at that site • Random sample of 250 medicalcharts/site • Replacement strategy for ineligible patients • Screening logs: • eligible and abstracted • ineligible • missing
Methods • Retained patient: visit to one of the following services during the 90 days prior to data abstraction • Clinic • Laboratory • Pharmacy • Kaplan-Meier analysis • Attrition (=event): death or LTFU • transfer-outs censored at the time of transfer • Predictor analysis: Cox proportional hazard model, shared frailty effect
Lower retention amongst men in programs without community dispensing but similar in programs with ARV dispensing More difficultfor men tocometoclinicfor drug pick-up?
Conclusion • Wide variability in retentionratesamong different models of care • Importance of community ARV dispensing • Mobile clinics? • Community pharmacies? • Community ART groups? • Particularilyneeded for • Men • Younger persons • The very sick
Extra-Selected characteristics at baseline (ART initiation) (2)