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Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon

BACKGROUND: Little is known about how improved depression care affects HIV-related outcomes in Africa. In a sample of depressed HIV patients in a low income, sub-Saharan country, we explored how implementing measurement-based antidepressant care (MBC) affected HIV outcomes over 4 months of antidepre...

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Autores principales: Gaynes, Bradley N., Pence, Brian W., Atashili, Julius, O’Donnell, Julie K., Njamnshi, Alfred K., Tabenyang, Mbu Eyongetah, Arrey, Charles Kefie, Whetten, Rachel, Whetten, Kathryn, Ndumbe, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4607444/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26469186
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140001
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author Gaynes, Bradley N.
Pence, Brian W.
Atashili, Julius
O’Donnell, Julie K.
Njamnshi, Alfred K.
Tabenyang, Mbu Eyongetah
Arrey, Charles Kefie
Whetten, Rachel
Whetten, Kathryn
Ndumbe, Peter
author_facet Gaynes, Bradley N.
Pence, Brian W.
Atashili, Julius
O’Donnell, Julie K.
Njamnshi, Alfred K.
Tabenyang, Mbu Eyongetah
Arrey, Charles Kefie
Whetten, Rachel
Whetten, Kathryn
Ndumbe, Peter
author_sort Gaynes, Bradley N.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Little is known about how improved depression care affects HIV-related outcomes in Africa. In a sample of depressed HIV patients in a low income, sub-Saharan country, we explored how implementing measurement-based antidepressant care (MBC) affected HIV outcomes over 4 months of antidepressant treatment. METHODS: As part of a project adapting MBC for use in Cameroon, we enrolled 41 depressed HIV patients on antiretroviral therapy in a pilot study in which a depression care manager (DCM) provided an outpatient HIV clinician with evidence-based decision support for antidepressant treatment. Acute depression management was provided for the first 12 weeks, with DCM contact every 2 weeks and HIV clinician appointments every 4 weeks. We measured HIV clinical and psychiatric outcomes at 4 months. RESULTS: Participants were moderately depressed at baseline (mean Patient Health Questionnaire [PHQ] score = 14.4, range 13.1, 15.6). All HIV clinical outcomes improved by four month follow-up: mean (range) CD4 count improved from 436 (2, 860) to 452 (132, 876), mean (range) log-viral load decreased from 4.02 (3.86, 4.17) to 3.15 (2.81, 3.49), the proportion with virologic suppression improved from 0% to 18%, mean (range) HIV symptoms decreased from 6.4 (5.5, 7.3) to 3.1 (2.5, 3.7), the proportion reporting good or excellent health improved from 18% to 70%, and the proportion reporting any missed ARV doses in the past month decreased from 73% to 55%. Concurrently, psychiatric measures improved. The mean (range) PHQ score decreased from 14.4 (13.1, 15.6) to 1.6 (0.8, 2.4) and 90% achieved depression remission, while mean maladaptive coping style scores decreased and mean adaptive coping scores and self-efficacy scores improved. CONCLUSION: In this pilot study of an evidence-based depression treatment intervention for HIV-infected patients in Cameroon, a number of HIV behavioral and non-behavioral health outcomes improved over 4 months of effective depression treatment. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that better depression care can lead to improved HIV outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-46074442015-10-29 Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon Gaynes, Bradley N. Pence, Brian W. Atashili, Julius O’Donnell, Julie K. Njamnshi, Alfred K. Tabenyang, Mbu Eyongetah Arrey, Charles Kefie Whetten, Rachel Whetten, Kathryn Ndumbe, Peter PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Little is known about how improved depression care affects HIV-related outcomes in Africa. In a sample of depressed HIV patients in a low income, sub-Saharan country, we explored how implementing measurement-based antidepressant care (MBC) affected HIV outcomes over 4 months of antidepressant treatment. METHODS: As part of a project adapting MBC for use in Cameroon, we enrolled 41 depressed HIV patients on antiretroviral therapy in a pilot study in which a depression care manager (DCM) provided an outpatient HIV clinician with evidence-based decision support for antidepressant treatment. Acute depression management was provided for the first 12 weeks, with DCM contact every 2 weeks and HIV clinician appointments every 4 weeks. We measured HIV clinical and psychiatric outcomes at 4 months. RESULTS: Participants were moderately depressed at baseline (mean Patient Health Questionnaire [PHQ] score = 14.4, range 13.1, 15.6). All HIV clinical outcomes improved by four month follow-up: mean (range) CD4 count improved from 436 (2, 860) to 452 (132, 876), mean (range) log-viral load decreased from 4.02 (3.86, 4.17) to 3.15 (2.81, 3.49), the proportion with virologic suppression improved from 0% to 18%, mean (range) HIV symptoms decreased from 6.4 (5.5, 7.3) to 3.1 (2.5, 3.7), the proportion reporting good or excellent health improved from 18% to 70%, and the proportion reporting any missed ARV doses in the past month decreased from 73% to 55%. Concurrently, psychiatric measures improved. The mean (range) PHQ score decreased from 14.4 (13.1, 15.6) to 1.6 (0.8, 2.4) and 90% achieved depression remission, while mean maladaptive coping style scores decreased and mean adaptive coping scores and self-efficacy scores improved. CONCLUSION: In this pilot study of an evidence-based depression treatment intervention for HIV-infected patients in Cameroon, a number of HIV behavioral and non-behavioral health outcomes improved over 4 months of effective depression treatment. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that better depression care can lead to improved HIV outcomes. Public Library of Science 2015-10-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4607444/ /pubmed/26469186 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140001 Text en © 2015 Gaynes et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gaynes, Bradley N.
Pence, Brian W.
Atashili, Julius
O’Donnell, Julie K.
Njamnshi, Alfred K.
Tabenyang, Mbu Eyongetah
Arrey, Charles Kefie
Whetten, Rachel
Whetten, Kathryn
Ndumbe, Peter
Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon
title Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon
title_full Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon
title_fullStr Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon
title_short Changes in HIV Outcomes Following Depression Care in a Resource-Limited Setting: Results from a Pilot Study in Bamenda, Cameroon
title_sort changes in hiv outcomes following depression care in a resource-limited setting: results from a pilot study in bamenda, cameroon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4607444/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26469186
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140001
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