Treatment Outcomes After Offering Same-Day Initiation of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Treatment—How to Interpret Discrepancies Between Different Studies

Abstract The World Health Organization recommends same-day initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) for all persons diagnosed with HIV and ready to start treatment. Evidence, mainly from randomized trials, indicates offering same-day ART increases engagement in care and viral suppression during th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical infectious diseases 2023-10, Vol.77 (8), p.1176-1184
Hauptverfasser: Labhardt, Niklaus Daniel, Brown, Jennifer Anne, Sass, Nikita, Ford, Nathan, Rosen, Sydney
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container_end_page 1184
container_issue 8
container_start_page 1176
container_title Clinical infectious diseases
container_volume 77
creator Labhardt, Niklaus Daniel
Brown, Jennifer Anne
Sass, Nikita
Ford, Nathan
Rosen, Sydney
description Abstract The World Health Organization recommends same-day initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) for all persons diagnosed with HIV and ready to start treatment. Evidence, mainly from randomized trials, indicates offering same-day ART increases engagement in care and viral suppression during the first year. In contrast, most observational studies using routine data find same-day ART to be associated with lower engagement in care. We argue that this discrepancy is mainly driven by different time points of enrollment, leading to different denominators. While randomized trials enroll individuals when tested positive, most observational studies start at the time point when ART is initiated. Thus, most observational studies omit those who are lost between diagnosis and treatment, thereby introducing a selection bias in the group with delayed ART. This viewpoint article summarizes the available evidence and argues that the benefits of same-day ART outweigh a potential higher risk of attrition from care after ART initiation. Same-day versus delayed antiretroviral therapy initiation for people with HIV aims to reduce pretreatment attrition from care. Studies evaluating same-day initiation should start follow-up at the time of HIV testing/linkage to care to avoid selection bias in the delayed group. Graphical Abstract Graphical Abstract This graphical abstract is also available at Tidbit: https://tidbitapp.io/tidbits/reatment-outcomes-after-offering-same-day-initiation-of-hiv-treatment-how-to-interpret-discrepancies-between-different-studies
doi_str_mv 10.1093/cid/ciad317
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Evidence, mainly from randomized trials, indicates offering same-day ART increases engagement in care and viral suppression during the first year. In contrast, most observational studies using routine data find same-day ART to be associated with lower engagement in care. We argue that this discrepancy is mainly driven by different time points of enrollment, leading to different denominators. While randomized trials enroll individuals when tested positive, most observational studies start at the time point when ART is initiated. Thus, most observational studies omit those who are lost between diagnosis and treatment, thereby introducing a selection bias in the group with delayed ART. This viewpoint article summarizes the available evidence and argues that the benefits of same-day ART outweigh a potential higher risk of attrition from care after ART initiation. Same-day versus delayed antiretroviral therapy initiation for people with HIV aims to reduce pretreatment attrition from care. 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source MEDLINE; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Anti-HIV Agents - therapeutic use
HIV
HIV Infections
Humans
Observational Studies as Topic
Time-to-Treatment
Treatment Outcome
Viewpoints
title Treatment Outcomes After Offering Same-Day Initiation of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Treatment—How to Interpret Discrepancies Between Different Studies
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