Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a nurse-delivered intervention to improve adherence to treatment for HIV: a pragmatic, multicentre, open-label, randomised clinical trial

Summary Background No high-quality trials have provided evidence of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of HIV treatment adherence intervention strategies. We therefore examined the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the Adherence Improving self-Management Strategy (AIMS) compared with treatme...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet infectious diseases 2017-06, Vol.17 (6), p.595-604
Hauptverfasser: de Bruin, Marijn, Prof, Oberjé, Edwin J M, PhD, Viechtbauer, Wolfgang, PhD, Nobel, Hans-Erik, BSc, Hiligsmann, Mickaël, PhD, van Nieuwkoop, Cees, MD, Veenstra, Jan, MD, Pijnappel, Frank J, BSc, Kroon, Frank P, MD, van Zonneveld, Laura, BSc, Groeneveld, Paul H P, MD, van Broekhuizen, Marjolein, BSc, Evers, Silvia M A A, Prof, Prins, Jan M, Prof
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Zusammenfassung:Summary Background No high-quality trials have provided evidence of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of HIV treatment adherence intervention strategies. We therefore examined the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the Adherence Improving self-Management Strategy (AIMS) compared with treatment as usual. Methods We did a pragmatic, multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled trial in seven HIV clinics at academic and non-academic hospitals in the Netherlands. Eligible participants were patients with HIV who were either treatment experienced (ie, with ≥9 months on combination antiretroviral therapy [ART] and at risk of viral rebound) or treatment-naive patients initiating their first combination ART regimen. We randomly assigned participants (1:1) to either AIMS or treatment as usual (ie, containing a range of common adherence intervention strategies) using a computer-generated randomisation table. Randomisation was stratified by treatment experience (experienced vs naive) and included block randomisation at nurse level with randomly ordered blocks of size four, six, and eight. 21 HIV nurses from the participating clinics received three training sessions of 6 h each (18 h in total) on AIMS and a 1·5 h booster training session at the clinic (two to three nurses per session) after each nurse had seen two to three patients. AIMS was delivered by nurses during routine clinic visits. We did mixed-effects, intent-to-treat analyses to examine treatment effects on the primary outcome of log10 viral load collected at months 5, 10, and 15. The viral load results were exponentiated (with base 10) for easier interpretation. Using cohort data from 7347 Dutch patients with HIV to calculate the natural course of illness, we developed a lifetime Markov model to estimate the primary economic outcome of lifetime societal costs per quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (number NCT01429142 ). Findings We recruited participants between Sept 1, 2011, and April 2, 2013; the last patient completed the study on June 16, 2014. The intent-to-treat sample comprised 221 patients; 109 assigned to AIMS and 112 to treatment as usual. Across the three timepoints (months 5, 10, and 15), log viral load was 1·26 times higher (95% CI 1·04–1·52) in the treatment-as-usual group (estimated marginal mean 44·5 copies per mL [95% CI 35·5–55·9]) than in the AIMS group (estimated marginal mean 35·4 copies per mL [29·9–42·0]). Additionally,
ISSN:1473-3099
1474-4457
DOI:10.1016/S1473-3099(16)30534-5