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AIDS Care
Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV
Volume 19, 2007 - Issue 2
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Original Articles

Appropriateness of antiretroviral therapy in clients of an HIV/AIDS case management organization

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Pages 273-281 | Published online: 11 Jan 2007
 

Abstract

We sought to assess appropriateness of antiretroviral therapy (ART) reported by clients of an HIV/AIDS case management organization and identify variables associated with appropriate ART receipt. A total of 295 such clients were mailed a survey asking them to identify antiretroviral medications they were taking.Of them 220 (75%) returned surveys; 201 (93%) were taking antiretrovirals. Of these, 159 were on appropriate and 36 on inappropriate ART, as determined by guidelines created by the CDC, the International AIDS Society (USA Panel), and the Panel on Clinical Practices for Treatment of HIV Infection. In unadjusted analyses, age, sex, race, sexual orientation, history of injection drug use, history of sexual risk, and HIV knowledge were associated (p≤0.10) with appropriate ART and entered into one of two logistic regression models. The first model indicated that women (p=0.003) and heterosexuals (p=0.001) were less likely to receive appropriate ART than men and gay/bisexuals (and variables interacted, p=0.001). HIV knowledge – a proxy indicator determined by self-report of a CD4 cell count and viral load – was added to variables retained in first model to create a second model. Only sexual orientation was retained in this second model (p=0.02, in the same direction as in the first model), and those with less versus more HIV knowledge (p=0.04) were found to be less likely to receive appropriate ART (and variables interacted, p=0.04). Findings suggest that heterosexual men are less likely than women who, in turn, are less likely than gay/bisexual men to receive appropriate ART. HIV-related knowledge appears to increase likelihood of receiving appropriate ART and it attenuates the effect of sex.

Acknowledgments

We thank the clients from ActionAIDS, Inc., who participated in this survey. We also thank Kevin J. Burns, LCSW, and Kevin R. Conare, Director of Client Services and Executive Director, respectively, at ActionAIDS, Inc., without whose involvement this study could not have been completed. This study was funded by the Research Foundation of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Holmes was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (AI01482).

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