The Impact of Same-Day Antiretroviral Therapy Initiation Under the World Health Organization Treat-All Policy
Kerschberger B, Boulle A, Kuwengwa R, Ciglenecki I, Schomaker M
American journal of epidemiology · 2021-08
Abstract
Rapid initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) is recommended for people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), with the option to start treatment on the day of diagnosis (same-day ART). However, the effect of same-day ART remains unknown in realistic public sector settings. We established a cohort of ≥16-year-old patients who initiated first-line ART under a treat-all policy in Nhlangano (Eswatini) during 2014-2016, either on the day of HIV care enrollment (same-day ART) or 1-14 days thereafter (early ART). Directed acyclic graphs, flexible parametric survival analysis, and targeted maximum likelihood estimation (TMLE) were used to estimate the effect of same-day-ART initiation on a composite unfavorable treatment outcome (loss to follow-up, death, viral failure, treatment switch). Of 1,328 patients, 839 (63.2%) initiated same-day ART. The adjusted hazard ratio of the unfavorable outcome was higher, 1.48 (95% confidence interval: 1.16, 1.89), for same-day ART compared with early ART. TMLE suggested that after 1 year, 28.9% of patients would experience the unfavorable outcome under same-day ART compared with 21.2% under early ART (difference: 7.7%; 1.3%-14.1%). This estimate was driven by loss to follow-up and varied over time, with a higher hazard during the first year after HIV care enrollment and a similar hazard thereafter. We found an increased risk with same-day ART. A limitation was that possible silent transfers that were not captured.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Tuberculosis
- HIV Infections
- Antitubercular Agents
- Anti-HIV Agents
- Survival Analysis
- Retrospective Studies
- Public Sector
- Adolescent
- Adult
- Middle Aged
- Patient Dropouts
- World Health Organization
- Female
- Male
- Young Adult
- Policy
- Time-to-Treatment
- Eswatini