Background: For many people with HIV (PWH), taking antiretroviral therapy (ARV) every day is difficult.
Methods: Average adherence (Av-Adh) and log-transformed treatment interruption (TI) to ARV were prospectively measured over 6 months using electronic drug monitoring (EDM) in several cohorts of PWH. Multivariate linear regression models including baseline confounders explored the influence of EDM-defined adherence ( ) on 6-month log HIV-RNA. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to compare the risk of HIV-RNA detection (VR) within subgroups stratified by lower (≤95%) and higher (>95%) Av-Adh.
Results: Three hundred ninety-nine PWH were analyzed with different ARVs: dolutegravir (n = 102), raltegravir (n = 90), boosted PI (bPI; n = 107), and NNRTI (n = 100). In the dolutegravir group, the influence of adherence pattern measures on for HIV-RNA levels was marginal (+2%). Av-Adh, TI, and Av-Adh × TI increased the for HIV-RNA levels by 54% and 40% in the raltegravir and bPI treatment groups, respectively. TI increased the for HIV-RNA levels by 36% in the NNRTI treatment group. Compared with the dolutegravir-based regimen, the risk of VR was significantly increased for raltegravir (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 45.6; 95% CI, 4.5-462.1; = .001), NNRTIs (aOR, 24.8; 95% CI, 2.7-228.4; = .005), and bPIs (aOR, 28.3; 95% CI, 3.4-239.4; = .002) in PWH with Av-Adh ≤95%. Among PWH with >95% Av-Adh, there were no significant differences in the risk of VR among the different ARVs.
Conclusions: These findings support the concept that dolutegravir in combination with 2 other active ARVs achieves greater virological suppression than older ARVs, including raltegravir, NNRTI, and bPI, among PWH with lower adherence.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8297697 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab316 | DOI Listing |
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