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High acceptability and viral suppression of patients on Dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in Uganda: A mixed-methods prospective cohort study

Uganda adopted the integrase inhibitor dolutegravir (DTG) as part its preferred first-line HIV treatment regimen in 2018. Prior to the national rollout, the Uganda Ministry of Health and Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI) launched a pilot study in July 2017 aimed at better understanding patient...

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Autores principales: Nabitaka, Vennie Mbaziira, Nawaggi, Pamela, Campbell, Jennifer, Conroy, James, Harwell, Joseph, Magambo, Kinanga, Middlecote, Caroline, Caldwell, Benvy, Katureebe, Cordelia, Namuwenge, Norah, Atugonza, Rita, Musoke, Andrew, Musinguzi, Joshua
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7252626/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32459822
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232419
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author Nabitaka, Vennie Mbaziira
Nawaggi, Pamela
Campbell, Jennifer
Conroy, James
Harwell, Joseph
Magambo, Kinanga
Middlecote, Caroline
Caldwell, Benvy
Katureebe, Cordelia
Namuwenge, Norah
Atugonza, Rita
Musoke, Andrew
Musinguzi, Joshua
author_facet Nabitaka, Vennie Mbaziira
Nawaggi, Pamela
Campbell, Jennifer
Conroy, James
Harwell, Joseph
Magambo, Kinanga
Middlecote, Caroline
Caldwell, Benvy
Katureebe, Cordelia
Namuwenge, Norah
Atugonza, Rita
Musoke, Andrew
Musinguzi, Joshua
author_sort Nabitaka, Vennie Mbaziira
collection PubMed
description Uganda adopted the integrase inhibitor dolutegravir (DTG) as part its preferred first-line HIV treatment regimen in 2018. Prior to the national rollout, the Uganda Ministry of Health and Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI) launched a pilot study in July 2017 aimed at better understanding patients’ and prescribers’ experience and acceptability of DTG. Patients were enrolled in the study if they were newly initiating treatment or switched from an NNRTI regimen due to intolerance. Patients were followed up for 6 months after initiation onto DTG and acceptability and experiences were assessed through questionnaires at one-month and six-month follow-up visits. In addition to acceptability side effects of patients on DTG regimens were assessed. Analysis was conducted using MS Excel and SAS 9.4 and confidence intervals were adjusted for facility level clustering. A total of 365 patients from 6 study sites were enrolled in the study, of whom 50% were treatment-experienced and 50% treatment naïve. 325 patients completed the 6 months of follow-up. Survey results showed a high level of acceptability (more than 90%) of DTG-containing regimens for both categories of patients during the from one-month and six-months interviews. The rate of self-reported side effects amongst patients was 33% overall and higher for experienced (37%) than naïve (29%) patients at 6 months. Although frequencies declined between month-1 and month-6, the changes were not statistically significant. Almost all patients (94%) were virally suppressed at 6 months. Overall, the study findings showed a very high level of acceptability of Dolutegravir-based regimens across both experienced and naïve patients. The overall viral suppression rate in this cohort was 94% at six months of taking DTG-based regimen.
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spelling pubmed-72526262020-06-10 High acceptability and viral suppression of patients on Dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in Uganda: A mixed-methods prospective cohort study Nabitaka, Vennie Mbaziira Nawaggi, Pamela Campbell, Jennifer Conroy, James Harwell, Joseph Magambo, Kinanga Middlecote, Caroline Caldwell, Benvy Katureebe, Cordelia Namuwenge, Norah Atugonza, Rita Musoke, Andrew Musinguzi, Joshua PLoS One Research Article Uganda adopted the integrase inhibitor dolutegravir (DTG) as part its preferred first-line HIV treatment regimen in 2018. Prior to the national rollout, the Uganda Ministry of Health and Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI) launched a pilot study in July 2017 aimed at better understanding patients’ and prescribers’ experience and acceptability of DTG. Patients were enrolled in the study if they were newly initiating treatment or switched from an NNRTI regimen due to intolerance. Patients were followed up for 6 months after initiation onto DTG and acceptability and experiences were assessed through questionnaires at one-month and six-month follow-up visits. In addition to acceptability side effects of patients on DTG regimens were assessed. Analysis was conducted using MS Excel and SAS 9.4 and confidence intervals were adjusted for facility level clustering. A total of 365 patients from 6 study sites were enrolled in the study, of whom 50% were treatment-experienced and 50% treatment naïve. 325 patients completed the 6 months of follow-up. Survey results showed a high level of acceptability (more than 90%) of DTG-containing regimens for both categories of patients during the from one-month and six-months interviews. The rate of self-reported side effects amongst patients was 33% overall and higher for experienced (37%) than naïve (29%) patients at 6 months. Although frequencies declined between month-1 and month-6, the changes were not statistically significant. Almost all patients (94%) were virally suppressed at 6 months. Overall, the study findings showed a very high level of acceptability of Dolutegravir-based regimens across both experienced and naïve patients. The overall viral suppression rate in this cohort was 94% at six months of taking DTG-based regimen. Public Library of Science 2020-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC7252626/ /pubmed/32459822 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232419 Text en © 2020 Nabitaka 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nabitaka, Vennie Mbaziira
Nawaggi, Pamela
Campbell, Jennifer
Conroy, James
Harwell, Joseph
Magambo, Kinanga
Middlecote, Caroline
Caldwell, Benvy
Katureebe, Cordelia
Namuwenge, Norah
Atugonza, Rita
Musoke, Andrew
Musinguzi, Joshua
High acceptability and viral suppression of patients on Dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in Uganda: A mixed-methods prospective cohort study
title High acceptability and viral suppression of patients on Dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in Uganda: A mixed-methods prospective cohort study
title_full High acceptability and viral suppression of patients on Dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in Uganda: A mixed-methods prospective cohort study
title_fullStr High acceptability and viral suppression of patients on Dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in Uganda: A mixed-methods prospective cohort study
title_full_unstemmed High acceptability and viral suppression of patients on Dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in Uganda: A mixed-methods prospective cohort study
title_short High acceptability and viral suppression of patients on Dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in Uganda: A mixed-methods prospective cohort study
title_sort high acceptability and viral suppression of patients on dolutegravir-based first-line regimens in pilot sites in uganda: a mixed-methods prospective cohort study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7252626/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32459822
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232419
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