Cargando…

1609. Engagement in Care, Awareness, and Interest in Long-Acting Injectable Anti-Retroviral Therapy

BACKGROUND: Long Acting Injectable (LAI) therapy to treat HIV is now a viable alternative to daily oral medications. The success of early roll-out of LAI to eligible patients requires a better understanding of patients’ awareness and interest in this novel therapy. METHODS: We administered an electr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stout, Jacob, Allamong, Maxwell, Hung, Frances, Link, Katherine, Chan, Cliburn, Muiruri, Charles, Sauceda, John, McKellar, Mehri
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10677493/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1444
_version_ 1785150143021973504
author Stout, Jacob
Allamong, Maxwell
Hung, Frances
Link, Katherine
Chan, Cliburn
Muiruri, Charles
Sauceda, John
McKellar, Mehri
author_facet Stout, Jacob
Allamong, Maxwell
Hung, Frances
Link, Katherine
Chan, Cliburn
Muiruri, Charles
Sauceda, John
McKellar, Mehri
author_sort Stout, Jacob
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Long Acting Injectable (LAI) therapy to treat HIV is now a viable alternative to daily oral medications. The success of early roll-out of LAI to eligible patients requires a better understanding of patients’ awareness and interest in this novel therapy. METHODS: We administered an electronic survey to patients attending an urban HIV clinic in the US South (Duke University). Eligible participants were 18+ years old with a most recent HIV-1 viral load < 200 copies/ml, without any evidence of genotypic resistance to LAI components or chronic hepatitis B. Survey recipients were asked questions on their current treatment, their awareness and interest in LAI, and were asked to rate common benefits and concerns associated with LAI. After probing awareness of LAI, patients were provided further details on LAI for consideration for the rest of the survey. The survey also included the 3-item Brief Index of Engagement in HIV Care, a patient-reported measure of engagement in HIV care that has predicted future retention in care outcomes. RESULTS: Between January-April 2023, 480 patients were screened; 319 were found to be eligible, and 159 (50%) completed the survey. 73% were male; 44% Black, 7% Latinx; mean age was 49. The majority (119, 76%) were aware of injectable treatments, and 87 (56%) were interested in LAI. Among proposed benefits of injectables, ease of travel without pills, fewer medication interactions, and lack of daily pill-taking were most appealing. Among proposed concerns with injectables, out of pocket cost and insurance coverage of the new medicine were most worrisome. Black patients were more likely to be interested in LAI, and interested patients tended to be younger, single, and more recently diagnosed with HIV. Overall, patients surveyed were highly engaged in care (Mean 4.5/5, SD: 0.5)., but engagement was not predictive of awareness or interest in LAI. [Figure: see text] This table summarizes and compares the key patient characteristics between the patients who rated themselves interested or not interested in LAI CONCLUSION: As we roll out LAI in real world settings, it will be helpful to characterize which patients are most interested in order to optimize uptake and benefit. Ease of travel without pills, not having to remember daily doses, and fewer medication interactions were the most appealing reasons, while concerns about both insurance coverage and out of pocket cost will need to be addressed. DISCLOSURES: Mehri McKellar, MD, Gilead Sciences, Inc: Grant/Research Support
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10677493
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-106774932023-11-27 1609. Engagement in Care, Awareness, and Interest in Long-Acting Injectable Anti-Retroviral Therapy Stout, Jacob Allamong, Maxwell Hung, Frances Link, Katherine Chan, Cliburn Muiruri, Charles Sauceda, John McKellar, Mehri Open Forum Infect Dis Abstract BACKGROUND: Long Acting Injectable (LAI) therapy to treat HIV is now a viable alternative to daily oral medications. The success of early roll-out of LAI to eligible patients requires a better understanding of patients’ awareness and interest in this novel therapy. METHODS: We administered an electronic survey to patients attending an urban HIV clinic in the US South (Duke University). Eligible participants were 18+ years old with a most recent HIV-1 viral load < 200 copies/ml, without any evidence of genotypic resistance to LAI components or chronic hepatitis B. Survey recipients were asked questions on their current treatment, their awareness and interest in LAI, and were asked to rate common benefits and concerns associated with LAI. After probing awareness of LAI, patients were provided further details on LAI for consideration for the rest of the survey. The survey also included the 3-item Brief Index of Engagement in HIV Care, a patient-reported measure of engagement in HIV care that has predicted future retention in care outcomes. RESULTS: Between January-April 2023, 480 patients were screened; 319 were found to be eligible, and 159 (50%) completed the survey. 73% were male; 44% Black, 7% Latinx; mean age was 49. The majority (119, 76%) were aware of injectable treatments, and 87 (56%) were interested in LAI. Among proposed benefits of injectables, ease of travel without pills, fewer medication interactions, and lack of daily pill-taking were most appealing. Among proposed concerns with injectables, out of pocket cost and insurance coverage of the new medicine were most worrisome. Black patients were more likely to be interested in LAI, and interested patients tended to be younger, single, and more recently diagnosed with HIV. Overall, patients surveyed were highly engaged in care (Mean 4.5/5, SD: 0.5)., but engagement was not predictive of awareness or interest in LAI. [Figure: see text] This table summarizes and compares the key patient characteristics between the patients who rated themselves interested or not interested in LAI CONCLUSION: As we roll out LAI in real world settings, it will be helpful to characterize which patients are most interested in order to optimize uptake and benefit. Ease of travel without pills, not having to remember daily doses, and fewer medication interactions were the most appealing reasons, while concerns about both insurance coverage and out of pocket cost will need to be addressed. DISCLOSURES: Mehri McKellar, MD, Gilead Sciences, Inc: Grant/Research Support Oxford University Press 2023-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10677493/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1444 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Stout, Jacob
Allamong, Maxwell
Hung, Frances
Link, Katherine
Chan, Cliburn
Muiruri, Charles
Sauceda, John
McKellar, Mehri
1609. Engagement in Care, Awareness, and Interest in Long-Acting Injectable Anti-Retroviral Therapy
title 1609. Engagement in Care, Awareness, and Interest in Long-Acting Injectable Anti-Retroviral Therapy
title_full 1609. Engagement in Care, Awareness, and Interest in Long-Acting Injectable Anti-Retroviral Therapy
title_fullStr 1609. Engagement in Care, Awareness, and Interest in Long-Acting Injectable Anti-Retroviral Therapy
title_full_unstemmed 1609. Engagement in Care, Awareness, and Interest in Long-Acting Injectable Anti-Retroviral Therapy
title_short 1609. Engagement in Care, Awareness, and Interest in Long-Acting Injectable Anti-Retroviral Therapy
title_sort 1609. engagement in care, awareness, and interest in long-acting injectable anti-retroviral therapy
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10677493/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1444
work_keys_str_mv AT stoutjacob 1609engagementincareawarenessandinterestinlongactinginjectableantiretroviraltherapy
AT allamongmaxwell 1609engagementincareawarenessandinterestinlongactinginjectableantiretroviraltherapy
AT hungfrances 1609engagementincareawarenessandinterestinlongactinginjectableantiretroviraltherapy
AT linkkatherine 1609engagementincareawarenessandinterestinlongactinginjectableantiretroviraltherapy
AT chancliburn 1609engagementincareawarenessandinterestinlongactinginjectableantiretroviraltherapy
AT muiruricharles 1609engagementincareawarenessandinterestinlongactinginjectableantiretroviraltherapy
AT saucedajohn 1609engagementincareawarenessandinterestinlongactinginjectableantiretroviraltherapy
AT mckellarmehri 1609engagementincareawarenessandinterestinlongactinginjectableantiretroviraltherapy