1. HIV Symptom Clusters are Similar Using the Dimensions of Symptom Occurrence and Distress
- Author
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Wilson, Natalie L, Hoffman, Thomas J, Heath, Sonya L, Saag, Michael S, and Miaskowski, Christine
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Nursing ,Health Sciences ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Pain Research ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Factor Analysis ,Statistical ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Pain ,Syndrome ,Symptoms ,symptom clusters ,exploratory factor analysis ,HIV ,occurrence ,distress ,HIV Symptom Index ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Anesthesiology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ContextPeople living with HIV infection (PLWH) in the United States continue to experience a high symptom burden despite improvements in antiretroviral therapy.ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to determine if the number and types of symptom clusters differed based on whether symptom occurrence rates or distress ratings were used to create the clusters.MethodsData from 2,000 patients with complete symptom occurrence rates and distress scores on the 20-item HIV Symptom Index from their first ambulatory clinic visit at one of six national HIV centers of excellence in the Center for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems were used in these analyses. Exploratory factor analysis was used to create the symptom clusters.ResultsThe same four symptom clusters (i.e., gastrointestinal, psychological, pain, body image) were identified using occurrence rates and distress ratings. For both dimensions of the symptom experience, the psychological, pain, and body image clusters each had the same symptoms. For the gastrointestinal cluster, four symptoms loaded on the occurrence dimension and six symptoms loaded on the distress dimension.ConclusionThe number and types of symptom clusters were relatively similar across the occurrence and distress dimensions of the symptom experience. Symptom clusters in PLWH may provide insights into the development of targeted interventions for multiple co-occurring symptoms.
- Published
- 2022