The objective of this study was to determine if a lower rate of adherence (<95%) is sufficient to maintain HIV viral suppression in patients on an efavirenz-based regimen. This study was a retrospective review of pharmacy refill records at an HIV specialty pharmacy at Montefiore Medical Center's outpatient clinic. Data from 151 HIV-positive patients on an efavirenz-based regimen with at least one undetectable viral load (HIV RNA < 400 copies/mL) from December 2003 through March 2005 were reviewed. Adherence was calculated based on the formula: [(pills dispensed/pills prescribed per day/days between refills)x100%]. Calculated adherence for each time-period was correlated to the respective HIV-RNA value for that period. Of 151 patients, viral suppression was maintained in greater than 80% of time periods for adherence rates as low as 85-90%. The periods with 75-80% adherence also had higher than 85% suppression. Rates of suppression began to fall when adherence decreased to < 75%. In conclusion, lower adherence rates (<95%) on an efavirenz-based regimen were more successful in maintaining viral suppression than previously found with unboosted protease inhibitor-based regimens.
Directly observed therapy (DOT) of antiretroviral (ARV) medications has beneficial effects on HIV treatment for incarcerated inmates but has been associated with limited continuation after release and inadvertent disclosure of HIV status. Guided self-administered therapy (g-SAT) may be a preferred method of ARV delivery and may encourage medication-taking behavior. We surveyed the preference of 102 HIV-positive jailed inmates at the San Francisco City and County Jails regarding receiving ARVs via DOT versus g-SAT while incarcerated. Participants overwhelmingly preferred g-SAT over DOT.
Immunologic benefits were observed in subjects continuing enfuvirtide plus a PBR irrespective of baseline CD4+ cell count, complete viral suppression, or antiretroviral susceptibility data. Data suggest that initiation of enfuvirtide at CD4+ cell counts greater than 100 cells/mm(3)may be immunologically advantageous and independent of complete virologic response.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.