HIV Psychiatry
Journal Article Annotations
2023, 1st Quarter
HIV Psychiatry
Annotations by John A R Grimaldi MD, Mary Ann Cohen MD, FACLP, Kelly Cozza MD, DFAPA, FACLP, Luis Pereira MD
April, 2023
- Adherence to antiretroviral therapy in people living with HIV with moderate or severe mental disorder.
Of interest:
PUBLICATION #1 — HIV Psychiatry
Adherence to antiretroviral therapy in people living with HIV with moderate or severe mental disorder.
Priscilla Arashiro, Camila Guadeluppe Maciel, Fernanda Paes Reis Freitas, Gabriel Serrano Ramires Koch, João Cesar Pereira da Cunha, Anderson Ravy Stolf, Anamaria Mello Miranda Paniago, Márcio José de Medeiros, Cláudia Du Bocage Santos-Pinto, Everton Falcão de Oliveira
Abstract: Sci Rep. 2023 Mar 2;13(1):3569. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-30451-z.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection remains a serious public health concern, with an estimated 38 million people living with HIV (PLHIV). PLHIV are often affected by mental disorders at higher rate than the general population. One challenge in the control and prevention of new HIV infections is adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART), with PLHIV with mental disorders having seemingly lower adherence than PLHIV without mental disorders. This cross-sectional study assessed adherence to ART in PLHIV with mental disorders who attended the Psychosocial Care Network health facilities in Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, from January 2014 to December 2018. Data from health and medical databases were used to describe clinical-epidemiological profiles and adherence to ART. To assess the associated factors (potential risk or predisposing factors) with ART adherence, we used logistic regression model. Adherence was extremely low (16.4%). Factors associated with poor adherence were lack of clinical follow-up, particularly in middle-aged PLHIV. Other apparently associated factors were living on the streets and having suicidal ideation. Our findings reinforce the need for improvements in the care for PLHIV with mental disorders, especially in the integration between specialized mental health and infectious disease health facilities.
Annotation
Findings:
Cross-sectional data from the Brazilian National Unified Health System’s medical and health databases were used to assess adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) in people with HIV and comorbid, moderate or severe psychiatric disorders, including substance use, in medical care from January 2014 to December 2018, in the large Brazilian city of Campo Grande. Compared to the general population of people with HIV, those with comorbid mental health disorders were significantly less likely to adhere to antiretroviral therapy. In this study, only 16% of the sample met criteria for HIV medication adherence. Other risk factors for ART non-adherence included lack of follow-up medical visits, older age, and unstable housing.
Strengths and limitations:
The study’s principal strength is its use of large, medical, infectious disease, and psychiatric databases that include inhabitants of a large metropolitan area. This government-sponsored system is more likely to capture subpopulations of underserved, marginalized people living with HIV and mental health disorders. However, stigma associated with HIV, mental health and substance use disorders may be a barrier to care and thus findings may underestimate the problem. Other limitations include lack of generalizability of findings to other countries and other regions in Brazil, and use of medication dispensing history and self-report as proxies for medication adherence. The study’s descriptive and cross-sectional design precludes assumptions about causation.
Relevance:
The greater than expected co-occurrence of psychiatric morbidity in people with HIV and its negative effect on morbidity and mortality are well-documented. This study provides additional support to the important role that mental health clinicians play in ending HIV. Treatment as prevention and HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis are two pillars of the US national strategy to stop HIV transmission. Access, uptake, and adherence to these biomedical interventions are essential to their effectiveness. This study also reminds us that systems-level interventions, such as integration of mental health and substance use services with HIV medical care, are an important aspect of effective HIV care delivery.
PUBLICATION #2 — HIV Psychiatry
NEJM, Perspective Investing in National HIV PrEP Preparedness.
Jeremiah Johnson, Amy Killelea, Kenyon Farrow.
Abstract: N Engl J Med. 2023 Mar 2;388(9):769-771. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp2216100. Epub 2023 Feb 25.
Annotation
Annotation (unstructured):
This NEJM Perspective is a call for Congress and the Biden Administration to create a national program that insures access to HIV preexposure prophylaxis for all Americans, especially vulnerable and marginalized communities. Despite remarkable advances in HIV medicine that have dramatically reduced morbidity and mortality, HIV incident rates remain unacceptably high. Communities of color account for disproportionately high numbers of new infections and disproportionately low rates of PrEP uptake. Ending HIV will take political will and commitment of resources at federal, state and local levels targeting the uninsured and underinsured. Pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and pharmacies working in coordinated fashion with provider networks and non-clinical community-based organizations will be required to reach these vulnerable populations. Building this infrastructure for HIV would prepare for future public health emergencies and could already be applied to monkeypox and HCV.
PUBLICATION #3 — HIV Psychiatry
High Virologic Suppression Rates on Long-Acting ART in a Safety-Net Clinical Population .
Abstract: Presentation #518.
Abstract from the 2023 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, 2023.
Annotation
Annotation (unstructured):
This abstract, presented at the 2023 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, described an NIAID- and NIMH-funded study that assessed the use of long-acting antiretroviral treatment (LA-ART) in historically underserved people with HIV (PWH); those with mental illness, substance use disorders and unstable housing. PWH experiencing these conditions have limited access to care and face significant barriers to ART adherence. They have been left behind in the remarkable progress made in treating HIV. In addition, this disadvantaged group is less likely to receive LA-ART since the FDA approved it for PWH who have already achieved viral suppression on oral ART. The study included 133 participants with unstable housing or homelessness, mental illness, or substance use disorders. At baseline, 57 participants were either not virologically suppressed or untreated and 76 were suppressed. At follow-up, all 76 suppressed participants remained virologically suppressed, and, 55 of the 57 (97%) unsuppressed participants had achieved viral suppression. Previous studies demonstrated that patients treated early with uninterrupted ART have better outcomes and are significantly less likely to transmit HIV to their partners. This study addresses existing unequal access to treatment and improved outcomes among PWH with co-existing psychiatric and substance-related morbidity and psychosocial vulnerabilities.