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Comparing self-reported medication adherence measures with hair antiretroviral concentration among people living with HIV in Guangxi, China

Quan Zhang, Xiaoming Li, Shan Qiao, Zhiyong Shen, Yuejiao Zhou

2020AIDS Research and Therapy35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Antiretroviral adherence is essential to HIV treatment efficacy. Various self-reported measures are commonly used for assessing antiretroviral adherence. Limited data are available regarding the validity of those self-reported measures in comparison with long-term objective biomarkers of adherence measures such as hair measures. METHODS: Self-reported adherence (frequency, percentage, and visual analog scale [VAS]) and hair tenofovir concentration were evaluated at a single time point from 268 people living with HIV in China. The responses to each of three self-reported measures were converted into percentage and then dichotomized as "optimal" (100%) vs. "suboptimal" (less than 100%) adherence. Two composite adherence scores (CAS) were created from the three self-reported measures: (1) an overall adherence was the average percentage of the three self-reported measures; (2) responses were termed optimal adherence if participants reporting optimal adherence in all three self-reported measures, while were termed suboptimal adherence. Hair tenofovir concentration was also dichotomized as "optimal" (above the limit of quantitation, 36 pg/mg) vs. "suboptimal" adherence (blow 36 pg/mg). Spearman correlation, kappa statistics, and logistic regression analysis were used to calculate the correlations, agreements, and predictions of self-reported measures with hair measure, respectively. RESULTS: Overall adherence, but any of the three self-reported adherence, was correlated with hair tenofovir concentration (r = 0.13, p < 0.05). Self-reported optimal adherence in VAS and CAS measures were agreed with and predicted optimal adherence assessed by hair measure (Kappa = 0.107, adjusted OR = 1.88, 95% CI 1.03-3.45; Kappa = 0.109, adjusted OR = 1.80, 95% CI 1.02-3.18; all p < 0.05, respectively). CONCLUSION: VAS may be a good individual self-reported measure for antiretroviral adherence, and CAS may be a good composite self-reported measure for antiretroviral adherence.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Medication adherenceChinaAntiretroviral therapyEnvironmental healthTraditional medicineAntiretroviral treatmentPharmacologyFamily medicineInternal medicineViral loadLawPolitical scienceHIV/AIDS Research and InterventionsHIV-related health complications and treatmentsHIV/AIDS drug development and treatment