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AIDS Care
Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV
Volume 26, 2014 - Issue 5
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Original Articles

Expansion of HIV care and treatment in Yunnan Province, China: Treatment outcomes with scale up of combination antiretroviral therapy

, , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 633-641 | Received 12 Dec 2012, Accepted 12 Sep 2013, Published online: 11 Oct 2013
 

Abstract

Effective health care models to scale up combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) are needed in rural southwestern China. We aimed to evaluate the ART treatment outcomes and their associations with patients' demographic characteristics and pre-treatment clinical features in a scaled-up provincial ART program serving eight heavily HIV-affected prefectures in Yunnan Province. We abstracted information from a computerized database for adults initiating ART between July 2007 and September 2008. Survival functions of mortality and treatment failure were calculated by age group, gender, transmission mode, and baseline CD4 count. Multivariable Cox regression analyses were conducted to find independent associations of various demographic and baseline clinical features with outcome variables. Of the 1967 patients in the mortality analysis, there were 110 deaths, of which 16 were coded as accidents or suicides. Adjusted hazard ratios (AHR) associated with mortality were greater for patients with baseline CD4 counts <100 cells/µl vs. patients with CD4 counts ≥200 cells/µl, for male vs. female, for single vs. married, and for those acquired HIV through injection drug use (IDU) vs. other modes of transmission. Successful treatment was 81.3% at six months after treatment started. Immunologic treatment failure was associated with baseline CD4 counts but not with demographic characteristics. Overall loss to follow-up rate was 2.1%. Collaboration between clinics and community networks are distinctive features of Yunnan's model for scaling up ART across a diverse, poor, and rural population. This study finds that the strategy can succeed even if 40% of the patients have a history of IDU.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to commend the many health care providers and community outreach workers in Yunnan for their dedication to providing quality care to their patients. We also thank Eric Goosby, MD, formerly of Pangaea Global AIDS Foundation and Medical Director of the William J. Clinton Foundation's China program, for his years of visionary guidance and clinical mentorship to the Yunnan BOH-CHAI program and local clinicians. The findings and conclusions in this paper are those of the authors and do not represent the views of the U.S. Department of State.

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