Cargando…

Evaluation of the Management of Patients with Detectable Viral Load after the Implementation of Routine Viral Load Monitoring in an Urban HIV Clinic in Uganda

OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical decisions taken for patients failing on treatment and possible implementation leakages within the monitoring cascade at a large urban HIV Centre in Kampala, Uganda. METHODS: As per internal clinic guidelines, VL results >1,000 copies/ml are flagged by a quality...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mark, Nsumba Steven, Rachel, Musomba, Kaimal, Arvind, Frank, Mubiru, Harriet, Tibakabikoba, Isaac, Lwanga, Lamorde, Mohammed, Barbara, Castelnuovo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6942703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31934447
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9271450
_version_ 1783484748676464640
author Mark, Nsumba Steven
Rachel, Musomba
Kaimal, Arvind
Frank, Mubiru
Harriet, Tibakabikoba
Isaac, Lwanga
Lamorde, Mohammed
Barbara, Castelnuovo
author_facet Mark, Nsumba Steven
Rachel, Musomba
Kaimal, Arvind
Frank, Mubiru
Harriet, Tibakabikoba
Isaac, Lwanga
Lamorde, Mohammed
Barbara, Castelnuovo
author_sort Mark, Nsumba Steven
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical decisions taken for patients failing on treatment and possible implementation leakages within the monitoring cascade at a large urban HIV Centre in Kampala, Uganda. METHODS: As per internal clinic guidelines, VL results >1,000 copies/ml are flagged by a quality assurance officer and sent to the requesting clinician. The clinician fills a “decision form” choosing: (1) refer for adherence counselling, (2) repeat VL after 3 months, and (3) switch to second line. We performed data extraction on a random sample of 100 patients with VL test >1,000 copies/ml between January and August 2015. For each patient, we described the action taken by the clinicians. RESULTS: Of 6,438 patients with VL performed, 1,021 (16%) had >1,000 copies/ml. Of the 100 (10.1%) clinical files sampled, 61% were female, median age was 39 years (IQR: 32–47), 81% were on 1(st)-line ART, 19% on 2(nd)-line, median CD4 count was 249 cells/µL (IQR: 145–390), median log(10) VL 4.42 (IQR: 3.98–4.92). Doctors' decisions were; refer for adherence counseling 49%, repeat VL for 25%, and switch to second line for 24% patients. Forty-one percent were not managed according to the guidelines. Of these, 29 (70.7%) were still active in care, 7 were tracked [5 (12.2%) lost to program, 2 (4.9%) dead] and 5 patients were not tracked. CONCLUSION: Despite the implementation of internal systems to manage patients failing ART, we found substantial leakages in the monitoring “cascade”. Additional measures and stronger clinical supervision are needed to make every test count, and to ensure appropriate management of patients failing on ART.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6942703
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Hindawi
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-69427032020-01-13 Evaluation of the Management of Patients with Detectable Viral Load after the Implementation of Routine Viral Load Monitoring in an Urban HIV Clinic in Uganda Mark, Nsumba Steven Rachel, Musomba Kaimal, Arvind Frank, Mubiru Harriet, Tibakabikoba Isaac, Lwanga Lamorde, Mohammed Barbara, Castelnuovo AIDS Res Treat Research Article OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical decisions taken for patients failing on treatment and possible implementation leakages within the monitoring cascade at a large urban HIV Centre in Kampala, Uganda. METHODS: As per internal clinic guidelines, VL results >1,000 copies/ml are flagged by a quality assurance officer and sent to the requesting clinician. The clinician fills a “decision form” choosing: (1) refer for adherence counselling, (2) repeat VL after 3 months, and (3) switch to second line. We performed data extraction on a random sample of 100 patients with VL test >1,000 copies/ml between January and August 2015. For each patient, we described the action taken by the clinicians. RESULTS: Of 6,438 patients with VL performed, 1,021 (16%) had >1,000 copies/ml. Of the 100 (10.1%) clinical files sampled, 61% were female, median age was 39 years (IQR: 32–47), 81% were on 1(st)-line ART, 19% on 2(nd)-line, median CD4 count was 249 cells/µL (IQR: 145–390), median log(10) VL 4.42 (IQR: 3.98–4.92). Doctors' decisions were; refer for adherence counseling 49%, repeat VL for 25%, and switch to second line for 24% patients. Forty-one percent were not managed according to the guidelines. Of these, 29 (70.7%) were still active in care, 7 were tracked [5 (12.2%) lost to program, 2 (4.9%) dead] and 5 patients were not tracked. CONCLUSION: Despite the implementation of internal systems to manage patients failing ART, we found substantial leakages in the monitoring “cascade”. Additional measures and stronger clinical supervision are needed to make every test count, and to ensure appropriate management of patients failing on ART. Hindawi 2019-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6942703/ /pubmed/31934447 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9271450 Text en Copyright © 2019 Nsumba Steven Mark et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mark, Nsumba Steven
Rachel, Musomba
Kaimal, Arvind
Frank, Mubiru
Harriet, Tibakabikoba
Isaac, Lwanga
Lamorde, Mohammed
Barbara, Castelnuovo
Evaluation of the Management of Patients with Detectable Viral Load after the Implementation of Routine Viral Load Monitoring in an Urban HIV Clinic in Uganda
title Evaluation of the Management of Patients with Detectable Viral Load after the Implementation of Routine Viral Load Monitoring in an Urban HIV Clinic in Uganda
title_full Evaluation of the Management of Patients with Detectable Viral Load after the Implementation of Routine Viral Load Monitoring in an Urban HIV Clinic in Uganda
title_fullStr Evaluation of the Management of Patients with Detectable Viral Load after the Implementation of Routine Viral Load Monitoring in an Urban HIV Clinic in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the Management of Patients with Detectable Viral Load after the Implementation of Routine Viral Load Monitoring in an Urban HIV Clinic in Uganda
title_short Evaluation of the Management of Patients with Detectable Viral Load after the Implementation of Routine Viral Load Monitoring in an Urban HIV Clinic in Uganda
title_sort evaluation of the management of patients with detectable viral load after the implementation of routine viral load monitoring in an urban hiv clinic in uganda
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6942703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31934447
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/9271450
work_keys_str_mv AT marknsumbasteven evaluationofthemanagementofpatientswithdetectableviralloadaftertheimplementationofroutineviralloadmonitoringinanurbanhivclinicinuganda
AT rachelmusomba evaluationofthemanagementofpatientswithdetectableviralloadaftertheimplementationofroutineviralloadmonitoringinanurbanhivclinicinuganda
AT kaimalarvind evaluationofthemanagementofpatientswithdetectableviralloadaftertheimplementationofroutineviralloadmonitoringinanurbanhivclinicinuganda
AT frankmubiru evaluationofthemanagementofpatientswithdetectableviralloadaftertheimplementationofroutineviralloadmonitoringinanurbanhivclinicinuganda
AT harriettibakabikoba evaluationofthemanagementofpatientswithdetectableviralloadaftertheimplementationofroutineviralloadmonitoringinanurbanhivclinicinuganda
AT isaaclwanga evaluationofthemanagementofpatientswithdetectableviralloadaftertheimplementationofroutineviralloadmonitoringinanurbanhivclinicinuganda
AT lamordemohammed evaluationofthemanagementofpatientswithdetectableviralloadaftertheimplementationofroutineviralloadmonitoringinanurbanhivclinicinuganda
AT barbaracastelnuovo evaluationofthemanagementofpatientswithdetectableviralloadaftertheimplementationofroutineviralloadmonitoringinanurbanhivclinicinuganda