1,438 results on '"Mugavero, Michael J."'
Search Results
2. Hospital Readmissions Among Persons With Human Immunodeficiency Virus in the United States and Canada, 2005–2018: A Collaboration of Cohort Studies
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Davy-Mendez, Thibaut, Napravnik, Sonia, Hogan, Brenna C, Eron, Joseph J, Gebo, Kelly A, Althoff, Keri N, Moore, Richard D, Silverberg, Michael J, Horberg, Michael A, Gill, M John, Rebeiro, Peter F, Karris, Maile Y, Klein, Marina B, Kitahata, Mari M, Crane, Heidi M, Nijhawan, Ank, McGinnis, Kathleen A, Thorne, Jennifer E, Lima, Viviane D, Bosch, Ronald J, Colasanti, Jonathan A, Rabkin, Charles S, Lang, Raynell, Berry, Stephen A, Benson, Constance A, Kirk, Gregory D, Greenberg, Alan E, Castel, Amanda D, Monroe, Anne K, Marconi, Vincent, Colasanti, Jonathan, Mayer, Kenneth H, Grasso, Chris, Hogg, Robert S, Montaner, Julio SG, Salters, Kate, Buchacz, Kate, Li, Jun, Jacobson, Jeffrey, Brown, Todd, Tien, Phyllis, D'Souza, Gypsyamber, Smith, Graham, Loutfy, Mona, Gupta, Meenakshi, Rabkin, Charles, Kroch, Abigail, Burchell, Ann, Betts, Adrian, Lindsay, Joanne, Mayor, Angel M, Martin, Jeffrey N, Deeks, Steven G, Brooks, John T, Saag, Michael S, Mugavero, Michael J, Burkholder, Greer, Bamford, Laura, Karris, Maile, Sterling, Timothy R, Haas, David, Rebeiro, Peter, Turner, Megan, McGinnis, Kathleen, Justice, Amy, Gange, Stephen J, Lee, Jennifer S, Hogan, Brenna, Humes, Elizabeth, Coburn, Sally, Gerace, Lucas, and Stewart, Cameron
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Male ,Humans ,United States ,Patient Readmission ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Cohort Studies ,Canada ,aging ,healthcare utilization ,hospitalization ,readmission ,North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design (NA-ACCORD) of the International epidemiology Databases to Evaluate AIDS ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundHospital readmission trends for persons with human immunodeficiency virus (PWH) in North America in the context of policy changes, improved antiretroviral therapy (ART), and aging are not well-known. We examined readmissions during 2005-2018 among adult PWH in NA-ACCORD.MethodsLinear risk regression estimated calendar trends in 30-day readmissions, adjusted for demographics, CD4 count, AIDS history, virologic suppression (
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- 2023
3. The Brief Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Index: A Rapid 3-Item Scale to Measure Engagement in HIV Care
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Sauceda, John A, Lisha, Nadra E, Ludwig-Barron, Natasha, Salazar, Jorge, Dilworth, Samantha E, Johnson, Mallory O, Christopoulos, Katerina A, Koester, Kimberly A, Moore, Richard D, Mayer, Kenneth H, Fredericksen, Rob J, Mugavero, Michael J, and Neilands, Torsten B
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Prevention ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Viral Load ,brief ,engagement in HIV care ,measure ,retention in HIV care ,viral load ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
We created a brief version of The Index, a validated patient-reported measure that has potential to quickly identify patients at risk for poor retention. We analyzed Index scores from 2406 patients from 2016 to 2017 in a national cohort of patients in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care. Index scores predicted poor retention 12 months after administered.
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- 2023
4. Multilevel Resilience and HIV Virologic Suppression Among African American/Black Adults in the Southeastern United States
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Park, Jee Won, Wilson-Barthes, Marta G., Dulin, Akilah J., Hogan, Joseph W., Mugavero, Michael J., Napravnik, Sonia, Carey, Michael P., Fava, Joseph L., Dale, Sannisha K., Earnshaw, Valerie A., Johnson, Bernadette, Dougherty-Sheff, Sarah, Agil, Deana, and Howe, Chanelle J.
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- 2024
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5. “Just the Stigma Associated with PrEP Makes You Feel Like It's HIV Itself”: Exploring PrEP Stigma, Skepticism, and Medical Mistrust Among Black Cisgender Women in Urban and Rural Counties in the U.S. Deep South
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Irie, Whitney C., Mahone, Anais, Johnson, Bernadette, Marrazzo, Jeanne, Mugavero, Michael J., Van Der Pol, Barbara, and Elopre, Latesha
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- 2024
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6. Correction to: Multilevel Resilience and HIV Virologic Suppression Among African American/Black Adults in the Southeastern United States
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Park, Jee Won, Wilson-Barthes, Marta G., Dulin, Akilah J., Hogan, Joseph W., Mugavero, Michael J., Napravnik, Sonia, Carey, Michael P., Fava, Joseph L., Dale, Sannisha K., Earnshaw, Valerie A., Johnson, Bernadette, Dougherty-Sheff, Sarah, Agil, Deana, and Howe, Chanelle J.
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- 2024
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7. Discrimination and Calibration of the Veterans Aging Cohort Study Index 2.0 for Predicting Mortality Among People With Human Immunodeficiency Virus in North America
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McGinnis, Kathleen A, Justice, Amy C, Moore, Richard D, Silverberg, Michael J, Althoff, Keri N, Karris, Maile, Lima, Viviane D, Crane, Heidi M, Horberg, Michael A, Klein, Marina B, Gange, Stephen J, Gebo, Kelly A, Mayor, Angel, Tate, Janet P, Benson, Constance A, Bosch, Ronald J, Kirk, Gregory D, Marconi, Vincent, Colasanti, Jonathan, Mayer, Kenneth H, Grasso, Chris, Hogg, Robert S, Montaner, Julio SG, Sereda, Paul, Salters, Kate, Buchacz, Kate, Li, Jun, Jacobson, Jeffrey M, Thorne, Jennifer E, Brown, Todd, Tien, Phyllis, D’Souza, Gypsyamber, Smith, Graham, Loutfy, Mona, Gupta, Meenakshi, Rabkin, Charles, Kroch, Abigail, Burchell, Ann, Betts, Adrian, Lindsay, Joanne, Nijhawan, Ank, Mayor, Angel M, Gill, M John, Martin, Jeffrey N, Brooks, John T, Saag, Michael S, Mugavero, Michael J, Willig, James, Bamford, Laura, Eron, Joseph J, Napravnik, Sonia, Kitahata, Mari M, Sterling, Timothy R, Haas, David, Rebeiro, Peter, Turner, Megan, Lee, Jennifer S, McKaig, Rosemary G, Freeman, Aimee M, Van Rompaey, Stephen E, Morton, Liz, McReynolds, Justin, Lober, William B, Hogan, Brenna, You, Bin, Humes, Elizabeth, Gerace, Lucas, Stewart, Cameron, and Coburn, Sally
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Aging ,Infectious Diseases ,Women's Health ,HIV/AIDS ,Aetiology ,2.4 Surveillance and distribution ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Calibration ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,North America ,Veterans ,VACS Index 2.0 ,calibration ,mortality ,North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design (NA-ACCORD)a of the International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA) and Veterans Aging Cohort Study ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe updated Veterans Aging Cohort Study (VACS) Index 2.0 combines general and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific biomarkers to generate a continuous score that accurately discriminates risk of mortality in diverse cohorts of persons with HIV (PWH), but a score alone is difficult to interpret. Using data from the North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration (NA-ACCORD), we translate VACS Index 2.0 scores into validated probability estimates of mortality.MethodsBecause complete mortality ascertainment is essential for accurate calibration, we restricted analyses to cohorts with mortality from the National Death Index or equivalent sources. VACS Index 2.0 components were ascertained from October 1999 to April 2018. Mortality was observed up to March 2019. Calibration curves compared predicted (estimated by fitting a gamma model to the score) to observed mortality overall and within subgroups: cohort (VACS/NA-ACCORD subset), sex, age 500 copies/mL, CD4 count
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- 2022
8. Brief Report: Insomnia and Risk of Myocardial Infarction Among People With HIV
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Luu, Brandon R, Nance, Robin M, Delaney, Joseph AC, Ruderman, Stephanie A, Heckbert, Susan R, Budoff, Matthew J, Mathews, William C, Moore, Richard D, Feinstein, Matthew J, Burkholder, Greer A, Mugavero, Michael J, Eron, Joseph J, Saag, Michael S, Kitahata, Mari M, Crane, Heidi M, and Whitney, Bridget M
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Clinical Research ,Heart Disease ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Myocardial Infarction ,Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders ,HIV ,insomnia ,myocardial infarction ,type 1 myocardial infarction ,type 2 myocardial infarction ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology - Abstract
BackgroundInsomnia is common among people with HIV (PWH) and may be associated with increased risk of myocardial infarction (MI). This study examines the association between insomnia and MI by MI type among PWH.SettingLongitudinal cohort study of PWH at 5 Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems sites.MethodsClinical data and patient-reported measures and outcomes from PWH in care between 2005 and 2018 were used in this study. Insomnia, measured at baseline, was defined as having difficulty falling or staying asleep with bothersome symptoms. The Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems centrally adjudicates MIs using expert reviewers, with distinction between type 1 MI (T1MI) and type 2 MI (T2MI). Associations between insomnia and first incident MI by MI type were measured using separate Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, traditional cardiovascular disease risk factors (hypertension, dyslipidemia, poor kidney function, diabetes, and smoking), HIV markers (antiretroviral therapy, viral suppression, and CD4 cell count), and stimulant use (cocaine/crack and methamphetamine).ResultsAmong 12,448 PWH, 48% reported insomnia. Over a median of 4.4 years of follow-up, 158 T1MIs and 109 T2MIs were identified; approximately half of T2MIs were attributed to sepsis or stimulant use. After adjustment for potential confounders, we found no association between insomnia and T1MI (hazard ratio = 1.05, 95% confidence interval: 0.76 to 1.45) and a 65% increased risk of T2MI among PWH reporting insomnia compared with PWH without insomnia (hazard ratio = 1.65, 95% confidence interval: 1.11 to 2.45).ConclusionsPWH reporting insomnia are at an increased risk of T2MI, but not T1MI, compared with PWH without insomnia, highlighting the importance of distinguishing MI types among PWH.
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- 2022
9. Clinical and Behavioral Outcomes for Transgender Women Engaged in HIV Care: Comparisons to Cisgender Men and Women in the Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) Cohort
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Reisner, Sari L., Whitney, Bridget M., Crane, Heidi M., Mayer, Kenneth H., Grasso, Chris, Nance, Robin M., Poteat, Tonia, Mathews, W. Chris, Christopoulos, Katerina, Mugavero, Michael J., Chander, Geetanjali, Eron, Joseph J., Kitahata, Mari M., Delaney, Joseph A. C., and Fredericksen, Rob J.
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- 2023
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10. Drug and alcohol use among people living with HIV in care in the United States by geographic region
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Crane, Heidi M, Nance, Robin M, Whitney, Bridget M, Ruderman, Stephanie, Tsui, Judith I, Chander, Geetanjali, McCaul, Mary E, Lau, Bryan, Mayer, Kenneth H, Batey, D Scott, Safren, Steven A, Moore, Richard D, Eron, Joseph J, Napravnik, Sonia, Mathews, W Chris, Fredericksen, Rob J, Hahn, Andrew W, Mugavero, Michael J, Lober, William B, Saag, Michael S, Kitahata, Mari M, and Delaney, Joseph AC
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Health Sciences ,Public Health ,Human Society ,Psychology ,Sociology ,Prevention ,Substance Misuse ,Methamphetamine ,Brain Disorders ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,HIV/AIDS ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Good Health and Well Being ,Alcohol Drinking ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Crack Cocaine ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Practice Patterns ,Physicians' ,United States ,Drug use ,alcohol use ,marijuana ,methamphetamine ,HIV ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public health ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Substance use in the U.S. varies by geographic region. Opioid prescribing practices and marijuana, heroin, and methamphetamine availability are evolving differently across regions. We examined self-reported substance use among people living with HIV (PLWH) in care at seven sites from 2017-2019 to understand current regional substance use patterns. We calculated the percentage and standardized percentage of PLWH reporting current drug use and at-risk and binge alcohol use by U.S. Census Bureau geographic region and examined associations in adjusted logistic regression analyses. Among 7,686 PLWH, marijuana use was the most prevalent drug (30%), followed by methamphetamine/crystal (8%), cocaine/crack (7%), and illicit opioids (3%). One-third reported binge alcohol use (32%). Differences in percent of current use by region were seen for marijuana (24-41%) and methamphetamine/crystal (2-15%), with more use in the West and Northeast, and binge alcohol use (26-40%). In adjusted analyses, PLWH in the Midwest were significantly less likely to use methamphetamine/crystal (aOR: 0.13;0.06-0.25) or illicit opioids (aOR:0.16;0.05-0.53), and PLWH in the Northeast were more likely to use cocaine/crack (aOR:1.59;1.16-2.17), compared to PLWH in the West. Understanding differences in substance use patterns in the current era, as policies continue to evolve, will enable more targeted interventions in clinical settings among PLWH.
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- 2021
11. CD4 Count at Entry into Care and at Antiretroviral Therapy Prescription among Adults with Human Immunodeficiency Virus in the United States, 2005-2018
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Lee, Jennifer S, Humes, Elizabeth A, Hogan, Brenna C, Buchacz, Kate, Eron, Joseph J, Gill, M John, Sterling, Timothy R, Rebeiro, Peter F, Lima, Viviane Dias, Mayor, Angel, Silverberg, Michael J, Horberg, Michael A, Moore, Richard D, Althoff, Keri N, Benson, Constance A, Bosch, Ronald J, Emory-Grady, Gregory D Kirk, Mayer, Kenneth H, Grasso, Chris, Hogg, Robert S, Harrigan, P Richard, Montaner, Julio SG, Yip, Benita, Zhu, Julia, Salters, Kate, Gabler, Karyn, Li, Jun, Gebo, Kelly A, Johns, Richard D Moore, Carey, John T, Rodriguez, Benigno, Thorne, Jennifer E, Brown, Todd, Tien, Phyllis, D’Souza, Gypsyamber, Crouzat, Frederic, Loutfy, Mona, Smith, Graham, Gupta, Meenakshi, Klein, Marina B, Rabkin, Charles, Kroch, Abigail, Burchell, Ann, Betts, Adrian, Lindsay, Joanne, Nijhawan, Ank, Hunter-Mellado, Robert F, Mayor, Angel M, Martin, Jeffrey N, Brooks, John T, Saag, Michael S, Mugavero, Michael J, Willig, James, Bamford, Laura, Karris, Maile, Napravnik, Sonia, Kitahata, Mari M, Crane, Heidi M, Haas, David, Rebeiro, Peter, Turner, Megan, Park, Lesley, Justice, Amy, Gange, Stephen J, McKaig, Rosemary G, Freeman, Aimee M, Van Rompaey, Stephen E, Morton, Liz, McReynolds, Justin, Lober, William B, Hogan, Brenna, You, Bin, Humes, Elizabeth, Gerace, Lucas, Stewart, Cameron, and Coburn, Sally
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Adult ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Highly Active ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Prescriptions ,United States ,North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design ,CD4 count ,antiretroviral therapy ,treat all ,universal treatment ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
From 2005 to 2018, among 32013 adults with human immunodeficiency virus entering care, median time to antiretroviral therapy (ART) prescription declined from 69 to 6 days, CD4 count at entry into care increased from 300 to 362 cells/μL, and CD4 count at ART prescription increased from 160 to 364 cells/μL.
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- 2021
12. The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Index: Using a Patient-Reported Outcome on Engagement in HIV Care to Explain Suboptimal Retention in Care and Virologic Control
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Christopoulos, Katerina A, Neilands, Torsten B, Koester, Kimberly A, Sauceda, John A, Dilworth, Samantha E, Mugavero, Michael J, Crane, Heidi M, Fredericksen, Rob J, Cachay, Edward R, Mayer, Kenneth H, Moore, Richard D, Napravnik, Sonia, and Johnson, Mallory O
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Mental Health ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Cohort Studies ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Retention in Care ,United States ,Viral Load ,engagement in care ,retention in care ,viral suppression ,patient-reported outcome ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundWe investigated the prospective association between a brief self-report measure of engagement in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care (the Index of Engagement in HIV Care; hereafter "Index") and suboptimal retention and viral suppression outcomes.MethodsThe Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems cohort study combines medical record data with patient-reported outcomes from 8 HIV clinics in the United States, which from April 2016 to March 2017 included the 10-item Index. Multivariable logistic regression was used to estimate the risk and odds ratios of mean Index scores on 2 outcomes in the subsequent year: (1) not keeping ≥75% of scheduled HIV care appointments; and (2) for those with viral suppression at Index assessment, having viral load >200 copies/mL on ≥1 measurement. We also used generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) to estimate the risk and odds ratios of appointment nonattendance or unsuppressed viral load at any given observation. We generated receiver operating characteristic curves for the full models overlaid with the Index as a sole predictor.ResultsThe mean Index score was 4.5 (standard deviation, 0.6). Higher Index scores were associated with lower relative risk of suboptimal retention (n = 2576; logistic regression adjusted risk ratio [aRR], 0.88 [95% confidence interval, .87-.88]; GLMM aRR, 0.85 [.83-.87]) and lack of sustained viral suppression (n = 2499; logistic regression aRR, 0.75 [.68-.83]; GLMM aRR, 0.74 [.68-.80]). The areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve for the full models were 0.69 (95% confidence interval, .67-.71) for suboptimal retention and 0.76 (.72-.79) for lack of sustained viral suppression.ConclusionsIndex scores are significantly associated with suboptimal retention and viral suppression outcomes.
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- 2021
13. Development and implementation of a distributed data network between an academic institution and state health departments to investigate variation in time to HIV viral suppression in the Deep South
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Bassler, John R., Cagle, Izza, Crear, Danita, Kay, Emma S., Long, Dustin M., Mugavero, Michael J., Nassel, Ariann F., Ostrenga, Lauren, Parman, Mariel, Preg, Summer, Wang, Xueyuan, Batey, D. Scott, Rana, Aadia, and Levitan, Emily B.
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- 2023
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14. A community health worker and mobile health app intervention to improve adherence to HIV medication among persons with HIV: the CHAMPS study protocol
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Wood, Olivia R., Schnall, Rebecca, Kay, Emma S., Jia, Haomiao, Abua, Joseph A., Nichols, Tyler K., Olender, Susan A., Mugavero, Michael J., and Batey, D. Scott
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- 2023
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15. Current and Past Immunodeficiency Are Associated With Higher Hospitalization Rates Among Persons on Virologically Suppressive Antiretroviral Therapy for up to 11 Years
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Davy-Mendez, Thibaut, Napravnik, Sonia, Eron, Joseph J, Cole, Stephen R, van Duin, David, Wohl, David A, Hogan, Brenna C, Althoff, Keri N, Gebo, Kelly A, Moore, Richard D, Silverberg, Michael J, Horberg, Michael A, Gill, M John, Mathews, W Christopher, Klein, Marina B, Colasanti, Jonathan A, Sterling, Timothy R, Mayor, Angel M, Rebeiro, Peter F, Buchacz, Kate, Li, Jun, Nanditha, Ni Gusti Ayu, Thorne, Jennifer E, Nijhawan, Ank, Berry, Stephen A, Benson, Constance A, Bosch, Ronald J, Kirk, Gregory D, Mayer, Kenneth H, Grasso, Chris, Hogg, Robert S, Montaner, Julio SG, Salters, Kate, Lima, Viviane D, Sereda, Paul, Trigg, Jason, Rodriguez, Benigno, Brown, Todd, Tien, Phyllis, D’Souza, Gypsyamber, Rabkin, Charles, Kroch, Abigail, Burchell, Ann, Betts, Adrian, Lindsay, oanne, Hunter-Mellado, Robert F, Martin, Jeffrey N, Brooks, John T, Saag, Michael S, Mugavero, Michael J, Willig, James, Mathews, William C, Kitahata, Mari M, Crane, Heidi M, Haas, David, Rebeiro, Peter, Turner, Megan, Tate, Janet, Dubrow, Robert, Fiellin, David, Gange, Stephen J, McKaig, Rosemary G, Freeman, Aimee M, Van Rompaey, Stephen E, Morton, Liz, McReynolds, Justin, Lober, William B, Lee, Jennifer S, You, Bin, Hogan, Brenna, Zhang, Jinbing, and Jing, Jerry
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Clinical Research ,Anti-HIV Agents ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Canada ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Male ,Viral Load ,HIV/AIDS ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,HIV ,hospitalization ,CD4 lymphocyte count ,sustained virologic response ,cohort studies ,North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design (NA-ACCORD) of IeDEA ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPersons with HIV (PWH) with persistently low CD4 counts despite efficacious antiretroviral therapy could have higher hospitalization risk.MethodsIn six US and Canadian clinical cohorts, PWH with virologic suppression for ≥1 year in 2005-2015 were followed until virologic failure, loss to follow-up, death, or study end. Stratified by early (Years 2-5) and long-term (Years 6-11) suppression and lowest pre-suppression CD4 count 500 cells/μL had an aIRR of 1.44 during early suppression (95% CI 1.01-2.06), and 1.67 (1.03-2.72) during long-term suppression. Among patients with lowest pre-suppression CD4 ≥200 (56%), patients with current CD4 351-500 versus >500 cells/μL had an aIRR of 1.22 (0.93-1.60) during early suppression and 2.09 (1.18-3.70) during long-term suppression.ConclusionsVirologically suppressed patients with lower CD4 counts experienced higher hospitalization rates, and could potentially benefit from targeted clinical management strategies.
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- 2021
16. Development and Validation of a Multivariable Prediction Model for Missed HIV Health Care Provider Visits in a Large US Clinical Cohort
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Pettit, April C, Bian, Aihua, Schember, Cassandra O, Rebeiro, Peter F, Keruly, Jeanne C, Mayer, Kenneth H, Mathews, W Christopher, Moore, Richard D, Crane, Heidi M, Geng, Elvin, Napravnik, Sonia, Shepherd, Bryan E, and Mugavero, Michael J
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Health Services ,Substance Misuse ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,HIV ,missed visits ,prediction model ,random forests ,retention in care ,Clinical sciences ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
BackgroundIdentifying individuals at high risk of missing HIV care provider visits could support proactive intervention. Previous prediction models for missed visits have not incorporated data beyond the individual level.MethodsWe developed prediction models for missed visits among people with HIV (PWH) with ≥1 follow-up visit in the Center for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems from 2010 to 2016. Individual-level (medical record data and patient-reported outcomes), community-level (American Community Survey), HIV care site-level (standardized clinic leadership survey), and structural-level (HIV criminalization laws, Medicaid expansion, and state AIDS Drug Assistance Program budget) predictors were included. Models were developed using random forests with 10-fold cross-validation; candidate models with the highest area under the curve (AUC) were identified.ResultsData from 382 432 visits among 20 807 PWH followed for a median of 3.8 years were included; the median age was 44 years, 81% were male, 37% were Black, 15% reported injection drug use, and 57% reported male-to-male sexual contact. The highest AUC was 0.76, and the strongest predictors were at the individual level (prior visit adherence, age, CD4+ count) and community level (proportion living in poverty, unemployed, and of Black race). A simplified model, including readily accessible variables available in a web-based calculator, had a slightly lower AUC of .700.ConclusionsPrediction models validated using multilevel data had a similar AUC to previous models developed using only individual-level data. The strongest predictors were individual-level variables, particularly prior visit adherence, though community-level variables were also predictive. Absent additional data, PWH with previous missed visits should be prioritized by interventions to improve visit adherence.
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- 2021
17. Hospitalization Rates and Causes Among Persons With HIV in the United States and Canada, 2005–2015
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Davy-Mendez, Thibaut, Napravnik, Sonia, Hogan, Brenna C, Althoff, Keri N, Gebo, Kelly A, Moore, Richard D, Horberg, Michael A, Silverberg, Michael J, Gill, M John, Crane, Heidi M, Marconi, Vincent C, Bosch, Ronald J, Colasanti, Jonathan A, Sterling, Timothy R, Mathews, W Christopher, Mayor, Angel M, Nanditha, Ni Gusti Ayu, Buchacz, Kate, Li, Jun, Rebeiro, Peter F, Thorne, Jennifer E, Nijhawan, Ank, van Duin, David, Wohl, David A, Eron, Joseph J, Berry, Stephen A, Benson, Constance A, Kirk, Gregory D, Mayer, Kenneth H, Grasso, Chris, Hogg, Robert S, Harrigan, P Richard, Montaner, Julio SG, Yip, Benita, Zhu, Julia, Salters, Kate, Gabler, Karyn, Carey, John T, Rodriguez, Benigno, Brown, Todd, Tien, Phyllis, D’Souza, Gypsyamber, Rabkin, Charles, Klein, Marina B, Kroch, Abigail, Burchell, Ann, Betts, Adrian, Lindsay, Joanne, Hunter-Mellado, Robert F, Martin, Jeffrey N, Brooks, John T, Saag, Michael S, Mugavero, Michael J, Willig, James, Mathews, William C, Kitahata, Mari M, Haas, David, Rebeiro, Peter, Turner, Megan, Tate, Janet, Dubrow, Robert, Fiellin, David, Gange, Stephen J, McKaig, Rosemary G, Freeman, Aimee M, Van Rompaey, Stephen E, Morton, Liz, McReynolds, Justin, Lober, William B, Lee, Jennifer S, and You, Bin
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Medical Microbiology ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Aging ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,Anti-HIV Agents ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Canada ,Comorbidity ,HIV Infections ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Risk Factors ,United States ,Viral Load ,HIV ,hospitalization ,cohort studies ,North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design of IeDEA ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundTo assess the possible impact of antiretroviral therapy improvements, aging, and comorbidities, we examined trends in all-cause and cause-specific hospitalization rates among persons with HIV (PWH) from 2005 to 2015.MethodsIn 6 clinical cohorts, we followed PWH in care (≥1 outpatient CD4 count or HIV load [VL] every 12 months) and categorized ICD codes of primary discharge diagnoses using modified Clinical Classifications Software. Poisson regression estimated hospitalization rate ratios for calendar time trends, adjusted for demographics, HIV risk factor, and annually updated age, CD4, and VL.ResultsAmong 28 057 patients (125 724 person-years), from 2005 to 2015, the median CD4 increased from 389 to 580 cells/µL and virologic suppression from 55% to 85% of patients. Unadjusted all-cause hospitalization rates decreased from 22.3 per 100 person-years in 2005 (95% confidence interval [CI], 20.6-24.1) to 13.0 in 2015 (95% CI, 12.2-14.0). Unadjusted rates decreased for almost all diagnostic categories. Adjusted rates decreased for all-cause, cardiovascular, and AIDS-defining conditions, increased for non-AIDS-defining infection, and were stable for most other categories.ConclusionsAmong PWH with increasing CD4 counts and viral suppression, unadjusted hospitalization rates decreased for all-cause and most cause-specific hospitalizations, despite the potential effects of aging, comorbidities, and cumulative exposure to HIV and antiretrovirals.
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- 2021
18. Prevalence of and Factors Associated With Genital and Extragenital Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Among Transgender Women in HIV Care in the United States, 2005 to 2016.
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Van Gerwen, Olivia T, Tamhane, Ashutosh, Westfall, Andrew O, Mugavero, Michael J, Crane, Heidi M, Moore, Richard D, Karris, Maile, Christopoulos, Katerina, Dombrowski, Julia C, Mayer, Kenneth H, Marrazzo, Jeanne, and Dionne-Odom, Jodie
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Genitalia ,Humans ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Chlamydia Infections ,Gonorrhea ,HIV Infections ,Prevalence ,Retrospective Studies ,Adolescent ,Adult ,United States ,Female ,Young Adult ,Transgender Persons ,Urologic Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Clinical Research ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
BackgroundData on testing rates and prevalence of and factors associated with genital and extragenital chlamydia and gonorrhea among transgender women with HIV in the United States are limited.MethodsThis retrospective cohort analysis included transgender women living with HIV enrolled in the US Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems cohort between January 2005 and December 2016 with chlamydia or gonorrhea testing performed in HIV clinic. The primary outcome was a positive test result for chlamydia or gonorrhea at urogenital or extragenital (rectal/pharyngeal) sites. Factors associated with infection were examined using logistic regression and generalized estimating equations to account for multiple tests per woman.ResultsAmong 312 transgender women in HIV care, 252 (81%) were tested for chlamydia or gonorrhea at least once. Annual testing rates were low: 23% to 53% at genital sites and 24% to 47% at extragenital sites. A total of 88 infections were detected, and 22% of women (55/252) had at least one positive test result. Most infections occurred at extragenital sites (80% of chlamydia and 82% of gonorrhea positive test results). Factors associated with infection in an adjusted model were as follows: age 18 to 29 years compared with ≥50 years (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 7.6; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.8-31.2), CD4 count >350 compared with CD4
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- 2021
19. Longitudinal Associations of Syndemic Conditions with Antiretroviral Therapy Adherence and HIV Viral Suppression Among HIV-Infected Patients in Primary Care
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Satyanarayana, Satyanand, Rogers, Brooke G, Bainter, Sierra A, Christopoulos, Katerina A, Fredericksen, Rob J, Mathews, William C, Moore, Richard D, Mugavero, Michael J, Napravnik, Sonia, Carrico, Adam W, Mimiaga, Matthew J, Mayer, Kenneth H, Crane, Heidi M, and Safren, Steven A
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Disparities ,Infectious Diseases ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Substance Misuse ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Continuity of Patient Care ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Medication Adherence ,Syndemic ,Viral Load ,HIV ,syndemic conditions ,treatment as prevention ,patient-reported outcomes ,adherence ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Public health - Abstract
Psychosocial syndemic conditions have received more attention regarding their deleterious effects on HIV acquisition risk than for their potential impact on HIV treatment and viral suppression. To examine syndemic conditions' impact on the HIV care continuum, we analyzed data collected from people living with HIV (N = 14,261) receiving care through The Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems at seven sites from 2007 to 2017 who provided patient-reported outcomes ∼4-6 months apart. Syndemic condition count (depression, anxiety, substance use, and hazardous drinking), sexual risk group, and time in care were modeled to predict antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence and viral suppression (HIV RNA
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- 2021
20. Internalized HIV Stigma Predicts Suboptimal Retention in Care Among People Living with HIV in the United States
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Pearson, Catherine A, Johnson, Mallory O, Neilands, Torsten B, Dilworth, Samantha E, Sauceda, John A, Mugavero, Michael J, Crane, Heidi M, Fredericksen, Rob J, Mathews, W Christopher, Moore, Richard D, Napravnik, Sonia, Mayer, Kenneth H, and Christopoulos, Katerina A
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Mental Health ,Social Determinants of Health ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Minority Health ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Good Health and Well Being ,Cohort Studies ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Retention in Care ,Social Stigma ,United States ,HIV ,AIDS ,HIV stigma ,internalized stigma ,retention in care ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Public health - Abstract
HIV-related stigma is a known barrier to retention in care. However, no large-scale, multi-site studies have prospectively evaluated the effect of internalized stigma on retention in care. The Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) cohort study integrates medical record and survey data from people living with HIV (PLWH) seen in HIV primary care clinics across the United States, and assesses internalized stigma yearly using a validated 4-item Likert scale. We used multivariable logistic regression models to evaluate associations between mean internalized stigma and two prospective retention in care outcomes: keeping the next primary care appointment and keeping all scheduled primary care appointments in the 12 months following stigma assessment. From February 2016 to November 2017, 5968 PLWH completed the stigma assessment and had adequate follow-up time. Mean stigma was 1.9 (standard deviation 1.08). Increased mean stigma scores were associated with decreased odds of attending the next primary care appointment [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 0.93, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.88-0.99, p = 0.02], and all primary care appointments in the subsequent 12 months (aOR = 0.94, 95% CI 0.89-0.99, p = 0.02). In both models, younger age and Black race were also independently associated with suboptimal appointment attendance. There was no support for interactions between internalized stigma and covariates. Internalized HIV stigma had an independent negative effect on the odds of subsequent appointment attendance. This study highlights the importance of identifying even low levels of internalized stigma. Interventions to address internalized HIV stigma are critical to supporting retention in care and improving clinical outcomes.
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- 2021
21. Disclosure Concerns and Viral Suppression in People Newly Initiating HIV Care: The Role of Internalized HIV Stigma.
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Yigit, Ibrahim, Bayramoglu, Yunus, Weiser, Sheri D, Johnson, Mallory O, Mugavero, Michael J, Turan, Janet M, and Turan, Bulent
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HIV/AIDS ,Pediatric ,Infectious Diseases ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Adult ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Disclosure ,Female ,HIV Infections ,HIV-1 ,Humans ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Middle Aged ,Social Stigma ,Young Adult ,disclosure concerns ,internalized stigma ,ART adherence ,viral suppression ,new-to-care ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology - Abstract
BackgroundResearch on how disclosure concerns affect health outcomes for people living with HIV (PLWH) has yielded inconsistent results. Theoretically, disclosure concerns could predict either poorer antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence (PLWH worried about disclosure may not want to take their medication in front of others) or better ART adherence (stronger concerns may enhance treatment adherence to avoid unintentional disclosure). Furthermore, internalized stigma (which is positively associated with disclosure concerns) predicts worse ART adherence (an effect potentially in the opposite direction of the direct effect of disclosure concerns).Setting/methodsOne hundred eighty-six PLWH initiating HIV care at 4 US clinics completed measures of disclosure concerns, internalized stigma, and ART adherence. Viral load data were obtained from medical records. We examined the indirect effect of disclosure concerns on outcomes, adjusting for the suppressor effect of internalized stigma. That is, we examined whether the association between disclosure concerns and ART adherence/viral suppression is stronger and positive when controlling for the effect of internalized stigma.ResultsDisclosure concerns were more strongly associated with better viral suppression and ART adherence when internalized stigma was in the model, suggesting that internalized stigma suppressed this association. Similarly, internalized stigma led to higher disclosure concerns, which in turn led to better ART adherence and higher likelihood of viral suppression. However, internalized stigma also had a direct effect in the opposite direction of this indirect effect.ConclusionsFindings highlight the importance of addressing effects of internalized stigma and disclosure concerns jointly when attempting to understand effects on health outcomes among new-to-care PLWH.
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- 2021
22. Estimating HIV transmissions in a large U.S. clinic‐based sample: effects of time and syndemic conditions
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Satyanarayana, Satyanand, Safren, Steven A, Rogers, Brooke G, Bainter, Sierra A, Christopoulos, Katerina A, Fredericksen, Rob J, Mathews, William C, Moore, Richard D, Mugavero, Michael J, Napravnik, Sonia, Carrico, Adam W, Mimiaga, Matthew J, Mayer, Kenneth H, and Crane, Heidi M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Substance Misuse ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Health Disparities ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Women's Health ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Highly Active ,Cohort Studies ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Sexual Behavior ,Syndemic ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,United States ,Viral Load ,Cohort studies ,HIV prevention ,HIV care continuum ,viral suppression ,treatment ,North America ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public health - Abstract
IntroductionLittle is known about onward HIV transmissions from people living with HIV (PLWH) in care. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has increased in potency, and treatment as prevention (TasP) is an important component of ending the epidemic. Syndemic theory has informed modelling of HIV risk but has yet to inform modelling of HIV transmissions.MethodsData were from 61,198 primary HIV care visits for 14,261 PLWH receiving care through the Centers for AIDS Research (CFAR) Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) at seven United States (U.S.) sites from 2007 to 2017. Patient-reported outcomes and measures (PROs) of syndemic conditions - depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, drug use (opiates, amphetamines, crack/cocaine) and alcohol use - were collected approximately four to six months apart along with sexual behaviours (mean = 4.3 observations). Counts of syndemic conditions, HIV sexual risk group and time in care were modelled to predict estimated HIV transmissions resulting from sexual behaviour and viral suppression status (HIV RNA
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- 2021
23. Clinic-Level Factors Associated with Retention in Care among People Living with HIV in a Multi-Site United States Cohort, 2010-2016
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Oliver, Cassandra D, Rebeiro, Peter F, Shepherd, Bryan E, Keruly, Jeanne, Mayer, Kenneth H, Mathews, W Christopher, Turan, Bulent, Moore, Richard D, Crane, Heidi M, Geng, Elvin, Napravnik, Sonia, Kitahata, Mari M, Mugavero, Michael J, and Pettit, April C
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Good Health and Well Being ,Cohort Studies ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Retention in Care ,Retrospective Studies ,United States ,retention ,clinic ,stigma support ,text reminders ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology - Abstract
BackgroundRetention in care (RIC) leads to reduced HIV transmission and mortality. Few studies have investigated clinic services and RIC among people living with HIV (PLWH) in the United States. We conducted a multisite retrospective cohort study to identify clinic services associated with RIC from 2010-2016 in the United States.MethodsPLWH with ≥1 HIV primary care visit from 2010-2016 at 7 sites in the Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) were included. Clinic-level factors evaluated via site survey included patients per provider/trainee, navigation, RIC posters/brochures, laboratory test timing, flexible scheduling, appointment reminder methods, and stigma support services. RIC was defined as ≥2 encounters per year, ≥90 days apart, observed until death, administrative censoring (31 December 2016), or loss to follow-up (censoring at first 12-month interval without a visit with no future visits). Poisson regression with robust error variance, clustered by site adjusting for calendar year, age, sex, race/ethnicity, and HIV transmission risk factor, estimated risk ratios (RRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for RIC.ResultsAmong 21 046 PLWH contributing 103 348 person-years, 67% of person-years were retained. Availability of text appointment reminders (RR, 1.13; 95% CI, 1.03-1.24) and stigma support services (RR, 1.11; 95% CI, 1.04-1.19) were associated with better RIC. Disparities persisted for age, sex, and race.ConclusionsAvailability of text appointment reminders and stigma support services was associated with higher rates of RIC, indicating that these may be feasible and effective approaches for improving RIC.
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- 2020
24. Intersecting Epidemics: Incident Syphilis and Drug Use in Women Living With Human Immunodeficiency Virus in the United States (2005-2016).
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Dionne-Odom, Jodie, Westfall, Andrew O, Dombrowski, Julia C, Kitahata, Mari M, Crane, Heidi M, Mugavero, Michael J, Moore, Richard D, Karris, Maile, Christopoulos, Katerina, Geng, Elvin, Mayer, Kenneth H, and Marrazzo, Jeanne
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Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,HIV/AIDS ,Infectious Diseases ,Liver Disease ,Digestive Diseases ,Prevention ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Hepatitis ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Epidemics ,Female ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Prevalence ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Syphilis ,United States ,Young Adult ,CNICS ,hepatitis C ,HIV in women ,injection drug use ,syphilis ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology - Abstract
BackgroundRates of early syphilis in US women are steadily increasing, but predictors of infection in this group are not clearly defined.MethodsThis retrospective analysis focused on women enrolled in the US CFAR Network of Integrated Clinical Systems cohort between January 2005 and December 2016 with syphilis testing performed. The primary outcome of incident syphilis infection was defined serologically as a newly positive test with positive confirmatory testing after a negative test or a 2-dilution increase in rapid plasma regain titer. Infection rates were calculated for each woman-year in care with testing. Predictors of syphilis were sought among sociodemographics, clinical information, and self-reported behaviors. Multivariable logistic regression models were created; a subgroup analysis assessed predictors in women of reproductive age.ResultsThe annual rate of incident syphilis among 4416 women engaged in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care and tested during the 12-year study period was 760/100 000 person-years. Independent predictors of infection were injection drug use as a risk factor for HIV acquisition (aOR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.3-3.9), hepatitis C infection (aOR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.1-3.4), black race (aOR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.3-3.7 compared with white race), and more recent entry to care (since 2005 compared with 1994-2004). Predictors were similar in women aged 18-49.ConclusionsSyphilis infection is common among US women in HIV care. Syphilis screening and prevention efforts should focus on women reporting drug use and with hepatitis C coinfection. Future studies should identify specific behaviors that mediate syphilis acquisition risk in women who use drugs.
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- 2020
25. Changes in Internalized Stigma and HIV Health Outcomes in Individuals New to HIV Care: The Mediating Roles of Depression and Treatment Self-Efficacy
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Yigit, Ibrahim, Bayramoglu, Yunus, Weiser, Sheri D, Johnson, Mallory O, Mugavero, Michael J, Turan, Janet M, and Turan, Bulent
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Mental Health ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Depression ,Infectious Diseases ,Health Disparities ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Illness ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Highly Active ,Discrimination ,Psychological ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Middle Aged ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Self Concept ,Self Efficacy ,Social Isolation ,Social Stigma ,Social Support ,Stereotyping ,United States ,internalized stigma ,new-to-care ,ART adherence ,viral suppression ,visit adherence ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Public health - Abstract
There is limited research on the effects of stigma on health outcomes among new-to-HIV care individuals. We examined the effect of changes in internalized stigma over time on health behaviors and outcomes such as viral suppression, antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence, and visit adherence among new-to-HIV care individuals. We also analyzed the mediating effects of adherence self-efficacy and depressive symptoms in these associations. Participants were 186 persons living with HIV who initiated care at four HIV clinical sites in the United States and had diverse geographical and ethnic backgrounds. Baseline and 48-week follow-up assessments included measures of internalized stigma, ART adherence, depressive symptoms, and adherence self-efficacy. HIV visit adherence and viral load data were extracted from clinic records. Age, race, gender, insurance status, and site were controlled in all analyses. Logistic regression analyses were used to examine predictors of adherence and viral suppression. Change (decrease) in internalized stigma was calculated by subtracting follow-up internalized stigma scores from baseline scores and served as the main predictor. Mediation analyses included calculation of 95% confidence intervals for the indirect effects using bootstrapping. Decreases in internalized stigma over time were positively associated with viral suppression, ART adherence, and visit adherence. Adherence self-efficacy significantly mediated these effects of decrease in internalized stigma on all outcomes. Depressive symptoms only mediated the association between decrease in internalized stigma and ART adherence. Interventions that address internalized stigma and depressive symptoms, as well as adherence self-efficacy, may significantly improve adherence and viral suppression outcomes for individuals new to HIV care.
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- 2020
26. Internalized HIV stigma predicts subsequent viremia in US HIV patients through depressive symptoms and antiretroviral therapy adherence.
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Christopoulos, Katerina A, Neilands, Torsten B, Dilworth, Samantha, Lisha, Nadra, Sauceda, John, Mugavero, Michael J, Crane, Heidi M, Fredericksen, Rob J, Mathews, William C, Moore, Richard D, Mayer, Kenneth H, Napravnik, Sonia, and Johnson, Mallory O
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Minority Health ,Depression ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Health Disparities ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,HIV/AIDS ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Mental Illness ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Highly Active ,Bayes Theorem ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Social Stigma ,Viremia ,Young Adult ,antiretroviral adherence ,depressive symptoms ,engagement in HIV care ,HIV stigma ,viral suppression ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Virology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveWe sought to examine the prospective association between internalized HIV stigma and unsuppressed viral load and to investigate whether this relationship was sequentially mediated by depressive symptoms and antiretroviral (ART) adherence.DesignLongitudinal study in a multi-site observational clinical cohort.MethodsThe Center for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) Patient-Reported Outcomes (PROs) survey measures internalized HIV stigma yearly using a 4-item assessment (response scale 1 = strongly disagree to 5 = strongly agree). We obtained PRO, lab, and appointment data from six CNICS sites. We used multivariable logistic regression to examine the association between mean stigma and subsequent viremia. We then used Bayesian sequential mediation to fit a longitudinal sequential path model spanning four time points to test if depressive symptoms at T1 and ART adherence at T2 mediated the effect of stigma at T0 on viral load at T3, adjusting for baseline covariates.ResultsBetween February 2016 - November 2018, 6,859 patients underwent stigma assessment and were 81% cis-men, 38% Black, 16% Latinx, 32% heterosexual-identified, and 49% ≥50 years of age. Mean stigma level was 2.00 (SD 1.08). Stigma was significantly associated with subsequent viremia (aOR = 1.16, 95% CI: 1.05-1.28, p 0.004), as were younger age and Black race. The chained indirect effect from stigma to unsuppressed viral load through depressive symptoms and then adherence was significant (standardized β = 0.002; SD = 0.001).ConclusionsInternalized HIV stigma positively predicts subsequent viremia through depressive symptoms and ART adherence. Addressing the link between stigma and depressive symptoms could help improve viral suppression.
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- 2020
27. Effects of an intervention on internalized HIV-related stigma for individuals newly entering HIV care.
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Yigit, Ibrahim, Modi, Riddhi A, Weiser, Sheri D, Johnson, Mallory O, Mugavero, Michael J, Turan, Janet M, and Turan, Bulent
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Mental Health ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Depression ,Women's Health ,Infectious Diseases ,Minority Health ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Pediatric ,HIV/AIDS ,Prevention ,Mental Illness ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adaptation ,Psychological ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Social Stigma ,Social Support ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,United States ,coping ,depression ,HIV ,intervention ,new-to-care ,stigma ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Virology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveConsidering the association between internalized HIV-related stigma and treatment adherence, an intervention addressing HIV treatment adherence may have the added benefit of reducing internalized stigma. The 'integrating ENGagement and Adherence Goals upon Entry' (iENGAGE) intervention was developed to facilitate adjustment to living with HIV among individuals newly engaged in HIV care. We evaluated the effects of this intervention on internalized stigma and examined whether the effect is moderated by depressive symptoms and coping styles.DesignThe iENGAGE intervention was tailored individually to improve information, motivation, and behavioral skills to promote treatment adherence and viral suppression. Three hundred and seventy-one participants initiating HIV care at four sites in the United States were randomly assigned to either the intervention receiving four face-to-face sessions or standard of care control arm.MethodsBaseline and 48-week follow-up assessments were conducted, which included validated measures of internalized HIV-related stigma, depressive symptoms, and coping mechanisms (behavioral disengagement and self-blame) as secondary outcomes. A repeated measures ANOVA evaluated the effect of the intervention on change in internalized HIV stigma. Furthermore, the moderating effects of depressive symptoms and coping mechanisms on the decrease in internalized stigma were examined.ResultsThe decrease in internalized stigma from baseline to 48 weeks was significantly larger in the intervention arm compared with the control arm. This effect was significantly moderated by baseline levels of depressive symptoms and self-blame.ConclusionThe multifaceted iENGAGE intervention is effective in reducing internalized stigma for new-to-HIV care individuals, especially with higher depressive symptoms or when using higher levels of self-blame coping.
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- 2020
28. Measuring Engagement in HIV Care: Measurement Invariance in Three Racial/Ethnic Patient Groups
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Sauceda, John A, Lisha, Nadra E, Dilworth, Samantha E, Johnson, Mallory O, Christopoulos, Katerina A, Wood, Troy, Koester, Kimberly A, Mathews, W Christopher, Moore, Richard D, Napravnik, Sonia, Mayer, Kenneth H, Crane, Heidi M, Fredericksen, Rob J, Mugavero, Michael J, and Neilands, Torsten B
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Minority Health ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Cohort Studies ,Ethnicity ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Reproducibility of Results ,engagement in HIV care ,retention in HIV care ,viral load ,measurement invariance ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
Objective: The objective of the study was to evaluate a novel measure of HIV care engagement in a large sample of non-Latino White, Latino, and African American patients. The Index of Engagement in HIV care (the Index) measures the degree to which a patient feels engaged/disengaged from HIV care. However, its measurement invariance, or the degree to which observed scores can be meaningfully compared across racial/ethnic groups, has not been established. Methods: The 10-item Index is a self-report measure initially validated in the Center for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Systems cohort study. Using Center for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Systems survey data, Index scores were linked to patients' electronic medical records, which included viral load (VL) and appointment attendance data. We conducted measurement invariance analyses to test the Index's performance in the 3 racial/ethnic groups and its cross-sectional association with VL and retention in HIV care (2 primary outcomes). Results: A total of 3,127 patients completed the Index, which showed good reliability across the 3 groups (alphas >.84). Confirmatory factor analysis model fit statistics showed that the Index demonstrated configural, metric, and scalar invariance, supporting the conclusion that the Index is a single factor construct. Lastly, lower Index scores associated with a concurrent detectable VL and poor retention in HIV care for all 3 groups. Conclusion: Having demonstrated invariance, the Index scores can be used to compare engagement levels across non-Latino Whites, Latinos, and African Americans in HIV care settings. Improving HIV care retention requires tools that can accurately identify people struggling to stay engaged in HIV care, especially racial/ethnic minorities. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2020
29. Association Between Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection and Myocardial Infarction Among People Living With HIV in the United States
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Williams-Nguyen, Jessica, Hawes, Stephen E, Nance, Robin M, Lindström, Sara, Heckbert, Susan R, Kim, H Nina, Mathews, W Chris, Cachay, Edward R, Budoff, Matt, Hurt, Christopher B, Hunt, Peter W, Geng, Elvin, Moore, Richard D, Mugavero, Michael J, Peter, Inga, Kitahata, Mari M, Saag, Michael S, Crane, Heidi M, and Delaney, Joseph A
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Epidemiology ,Health Sciences ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Hepatitis ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Digestive Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Hepatitis - C ,Liver Disease ,Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis ,Cardiovascular ,HIV/AIDS ,Heart Disease ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Comorbidity ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Hepatitis C ,Chronic ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Infarction ,Risk Factors ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Substance Abuse ,Intravenous ,United States ,Viral Load ,chronic hepatitis C infection ,hepatitis C virus ,HIV ,HIV coinfection ,myocardial infarction ,people living with HIV ,type 2 myocardial infarction ,Mathematical Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is common among people living with human immunodeficiency virus (PLWH). Extrahepatic manifestations of HCV, including myocardial infarction (MI), are a topic of active research. MI is classified into types, predominantly atheroembolic type 1 MI (T1MI) and supply-demand mismatch type 2 MI (T2MI). We examined the association between HCV and MI among patients in the Centers for AIDS Research (CFAR) Network of Integrated Clinical Systems, a US multicenter clinical cohort of PLWH. MIs were centrally adjudicated and categorized by type using the Third Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction. We estimated the association between chronic HCV (RNA+) and time to MI while adjusting for demographic characteristics, cardiovascular risk factors, clinical characteristics, and history of injecting drug use. Among 23,407 PLWH aged ≥18 years, there were 336 T1MIs and 330 T2MIs during a median of 4.7 years of follow-up between 1998 and 2016. HCV was associated with a 46% greater risk of T2MI (adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) = 1.46, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.09, 1.97) but not T1MI (aHR = 0.87, 95% CI: 0.58, 1.29). In an exploratory cause-specific analysis of T2MI, HCV was associated with a 2-fold greater risk of T2MI attributed to sepsis (aHR = 2.01, 95% CI: 1.25, 3.24). Extrahepatic manifestations of HCV in this high-risk population are an important area for continued research.
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- 2020
30. Association of Infection with Chronic Hepatitis C Virus and Myocardial Infarction in People Living with HIV in the United States
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Williams-Nguyen, Jessica, Hawes, Stephen E, Nance, Robin M, Lindström, Sara, Heckbert, Susan R, Kim, H Nina, Mathews, W Chris, Cachay, Edward R, Budoff, Matt, Hurt, Christopher B, Hunt, Peter W, Geng, Elvin, Moore, Richard D, Mugavero, Michael J, Peter, Inga, Kitahata, Mari M, Saag, Michael S, Crane, Heidi M, and Delaney, Joseph A
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HIV/AIDS ,Digestive Diseases ,Hepatitis ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis ,Hematology ,Liver Disease ,Hepatitis - C ,Infectious Diseases ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Comorbidity ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Hepatitis C ,Chronic ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Infarction ,Risk Factors ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Substance Abuse ,Intravenous ,United States ,Viral Load ,chronic hepatitis C infection ,hepatitis C virus ,HIV ,HIV coinfection ,myocardial infarction ,people living with HIV ,type 2 myocardial infarction ,Mathematical Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is common among people living with human immunodeficiency virus (PLWH). Extrahepatic manifestations of HCV, including myocardial infarction (MI), are a topic of active research. MI is classified into types, predominantly atheroembolic type 1 MI (T1MI) and supply-demand mismatch type 2 MI (T2MI). We examined the association between HCV and MI among patients in the Centers for AIDS Research (CFAR) Network of Integrated Clinical Systems, a US multicenter clinical cohort of PLWH. MIs were centrally adjudicated and categorized by type using the Third Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction. We estimated the association between chronic HCV (RNA+) and time to MI while adjusting for demographic characteristics, cardiovascular risk factors, clinical characteristics, and history of injecting drug use. Among 23,407 PLWH aged ≥18 years, there were 336 T1MIs and 330 T2MIs during a median of 4.7 years of follow-up between 1998 and 2016. HCV was associated with a 46% greater risk of T2MI (adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) = 1.46, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.09, 1.97) but not T1MI (aHR = 0.87, 95% CI: 0.58, 1.29). In an exploratory cause-specific analysis of T2MI, HCV was associated with a 2-fold greater risk of T2MI attributed to sepsis (aHR = 2.01, 95% CI: 1.25, 3.24). Extrahepatic manifestations of HCV in this high-risk population are an important area for continued research.
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- 2020
31. How Do Treatment Priorities Differ Between Patients in HIV Care and Their Providers? A Mixed-Methods Study
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Fredericksen, Rob J, Fitzsimmons, Emma, Gibbons, Laura E, Loo, Stephanie, Dougherty, Sarah, Avendano-Soto, Sonia, Anderson, Will A, Gutierrez, Cristina, Shurbaji, Sally, Burleson, Savannah, Christopoulos, Katerina, Poceta, Joanna, Mayer, Kenneth H, Mugavero, Michael J, Mathews, William C, Crane, Paul K, and Crane, Heidi M
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Female ,Goals ,HIV Infections ,Health Behavior ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Male ,Professional-Patient Relations ,Social Stigma ,White People ,HIV care ,Patient-provider communication ,Patient reported outcomes ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social Work ,Public Health ,Public health - Abstract
Evidence suggests priorities differ between patients in HIV care and their providers regarding topics most important to address in care. At five U.S. sites, we asked patients and providers to prioritize 25 potential topic areas to address during routine visits, and invited patients to discuss selection rationale. Patients (n = 206) and providers (n = 17) showed high discordance in rank order priorities (X2 (24, 223) = 71.12; p
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- 2020
32. Association of Immunosuppression and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Viremia With Anal Cancer Risk in Persons Living With HIV in the United States and Canada
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Hernández-Ramírez, Raúl U, Qin, Li, Lin, Haiqun, Leyden, Wendy, Neugebauer, Romain S, Althoff, Keri N, Hessol, Nancy A, Achenbach, Chad J, Brooks, John T, Gill, M John, Grover, Surbhi, Horberg, Michael A, Li, Jun, Mathews, W Christopher, Mayor, Angel M, Patel, Pragna, Rabkin, Charles S, Rachlis, Anita, Justice, Amy C, Moore, Richard D, Engels, Eric A, Silverberg, Michael J, Dubrow, Robert, Benson, Constance A, Bosch, Ronald J, Kirk, Gregory D, Mayer, Kenneth H, Grasso, Chris, Hogg, Robert S, Harrigan, P Richard, Montaner, Julio SG, Yip, Benita, Zhu, Julia, Salters, Kate, Gabler, Karyn, Buchacz, Kate, Gebo, Kelly A, Rodriguez, Benigno, Thorne, Jennifer E, Rabkin, Charles, Margolick, Joseph B, Jacobson, Lisa P, D’Souza, Gypsyamber, Klein, Marina B, Kroch, Abigail, Burchell, Ann, Betts, Adrian, Lindsay, Joanne, Hunter-Mellado, Robert F, Deeks, Steven G, Martin, Jeffrey N, Saag, Michael S, Mugavero, Michael J, Willig, James, Mathews, William C, Eron, Joseph J, Napravnik, Sonia, Kitahata, Mari M, Crane, Heidi M, Drozd, Daniel R, Sterling, Timothy R, Haas, David, Rebeiro, Peter, Turner, Megan, Fiellin, David, Gange, Stephen J, Anastos, Kathryn, McKaig, Rosemary G, Freeman, Aimee M, Van Rompaey, Stephen E, Morton, Liz, McReynolds, Justin, Lober, William B, Lee, Jennifer S, and You, Bin
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Digestive Diseases ,Prevention ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Cancer ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Anus Neoplasms ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Canada ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,United States ,Viral Load ,Viremia ,HIV infection ,CD4+T-cell count ,HIV-1 RNA viral load ,anal cancer ,risk ,North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design of the International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate AIDS ,CD4+ T-cell count ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPeople living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV; PLWH) have a markedly elevated anal cancer risk, largely due to loss of immunoregulatory control of oncogenic human papillomavirus infection. To better understand anal cancer development and prevention, we determined whether recent, past, cumulative, or nadir/peak CD4+ T-cell count (CD4) and/or HIV-1 RNA level (HIV RNA) best predict anal cancer risk.MethodsWe studied 102 777 PLWH during 1996-2014 from 21 cohorts participating in the North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design. Using demographics-adjusted, cohort-stratified Cox models, we assessed associations between anal cancer risk and various time-updated CD4 and HIV RNA measures, including cumulative and nadir/peak measures during prespecified moving time windows. We compared models using the Akaike information criterion.ResultsCumulative and nadir/peak CD4 or HIV RNA measures from approximately 8.5 to 4.5 years in the past were generally better predictors for anal cancer risk than their corresponding more recent measures. However, the best model included CD4 nadir (ie, the lowest CD4) from approximately 8.5 years to 6 months in the past (hazard ratio [HR] for
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- 2020
33. Complexities of HIV Disclosure in Patients Newly Entering HIV Care: A Qualitative Analysis.
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Chapman Lambert, Crystal, Tarver, Will L, Musoke, Pamela L, Stringer, Kristi L, Whitfield, Samantha, Turan, Bulent, Modi, Riddhi, Mugavero, Michael J, Fredericksen, Rob J, Weiser, Sheri, Johnson, Mallory O, and Turan, Janet M
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Health Services and Systems ,Nursing ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Pediatric AIDS ,Infectious Diseases ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,AIDS Serodiagnosis ,Adult ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Highly Active ,Discrimination ,Psychological ,Fear ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Interviews as Topic ,Male ,Prejudice ,Qualitative Research ,Self Disclosure ,Social Discrimination ,Social Stigma ,Social Support ,Treatment Adherence and Compliance ,Truth Disclosure ,United States ,adherence ,engagement in care ,iENGAGE ,new to care ,social support ,stigma ,Public Health - Abstract
The role of HIV disclosure and its influence on engagement in HIV care after initial linkage to care is not well understood. We conducted 28 in-depth interviews with patients newly entering HIV care. Gaining access to social support was a key reason that many patients disclosed their HIV status. For some, HIV disclosure improved support networks related to engagement in care at the time of care entry, in the form of appointment reminders, emotional support, and confidence to disclose more widely. However, some participants cited anticipated stigma as a barrier to disclosure, as they feared rejection or further disclosure without their permission. Early access to social support and skill building related to stigma reduction and coping can be useful resources to help patients manage HIV, as they initiate care. In addition, incorporating support for smart disclosure decisions into interventions may improve access to social support, ultimately improving engagement in care.
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- 2020
34. Impact of Abstinence and of Reducing Illicit Drug Use Without Abstinence on Human Immunodeficiency Virus Viral Load.
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Nance, Robin M, Trejo, Maria Esther Perez, Whitney, Bridget M, Delaney, Joseph AC, Altice, Fredrick L, Beckwith, Curt G, Chander, Geetanjali, Chandler, Redonna, Christopoulous, Katerina, Cunningham, Chinazo, Cunningham, William E, Del Rio, Carlos, Donovan, Dennis, Eron, Joseph J, Fredericksen, Rob J, Kahana, Shoshana, Kitahata, Mari M, Kronmal, Richard, Kuo, Irene, Kurth, Ann, Mathews, W Chris, Mayer, Kenneth H, Moore, Richard D, Mugavero, Michael J, Ouellet, Lawrence J, Quan, Vu M, Saag, Michael S, Simoni, Jane M, Springer, Sandra, Strand, Lauren, Taxman, Faye, Young, Jeremy D, and Crane, Heidi M
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Methamphetamine ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Prevention ,Substance Misuse ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Illicit Drugs ,Longitudinal Studies ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Viral Load ,substance use ,drug use ,heroin ,viral suppression ,abstinence ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundSubstance use is common among people living with human immunodeficiency virus (PLWH) and a barrier to achieving viral suppression. Among PLWH who report illicit drug use, we evaluated associations between HIV viral load (VL) and reduced use of illicit opioids, methamphetamine/crystal, cocaine/crack, and marijuana, regardless of whether or not abstinence was achieved.MethodsThis was a longitudinal cohort study of PLWH from 7 HIV clinics or 4 clinical studies. We used joint longitudinal and survival models to examine the impact of decreasing drug use and of abstinence for each drug on viral suppression. We repeated analyses using linear mixed models to examine associations between change in frequency of drug use and VL.ResultsThe number of PLWH who were using each drug at baseline ranged from n = 568 (illicit opioids) to n = 4272 (marijuana). Abstinence was associated with higher odds of viral suppression (odds ratio [OR], 1.4-2.2) and lower relative VL (ranging from 21% to 42% by drug) for all 4 drug categories. Reducing frequency of illicit opioid or methamphetamine/crystal use without abstinence was associated with VL suppression (OR, 2.2, 1.6, respectively). Reducing frequency of illicit opioid or methamphetamine/crystal use without abstinence was associated with lower relative VL (47%, 38%, respectively).ConclusionsAbstinence was associated with viral suppression. In addition, reducing use of illicit opioids or methamphetamine/crystal, even without abstinence, was also associated with viral suppression. Our findings highlight the impact of reducing substance use, even when abstinence is not achieved, and the potential benefits of medications, behavioral interventions, and harm-reduction interventions.
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- 2020
35. PrEP service delivery preferences of black Cis-gender women living in the Southern United States
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Elopre, Latesha, Boutwell, Alexander, Gordon, Bretia, Johnson, Bernadette, Marrazzo, Jeanne, Van Der Pol, Barbara, and Mugavero, Michael J.
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- 2022
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36. Multicenter Development and Validation of a Model for Predicting Retention in Care Among People with HIV
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Ridgway, Jessica P., Ajith, Aswathy, Friedman, Eleanor E., Mugavero, Michael J., Kitahata, Mari M., Crane, Heidi M., Moore, Richard D., Webel, Allison, Cachay, Edward R., Christopoulos, Katerina A., Mayer, Kenneth H., Napravnik, Sonia, and Mayampurath, Anoop
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- 2022
- Full Text
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37. Development of Long and Short Forms of the Multilevel Resilience Resource Measure for African American/Black Adults Living with HIV
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Dulin, Akilah J., Fava, Joseph L., Earnshaw, Valerie A., Dale, Sannisha K., Carey, Michael P., Wilson-Barthes, Marta, Mugavero, Michael J., Dougherty-Sheff, Sarah, Johnson, Bernadette, Napravnik, Sonia, Agil, Deana, and Howe, Chanelle J.
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- 2022
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38. Development and content validation of the Multifactoral assessment of perceived social support (MAPSS), a brief, patient-reported measure of social support for use in HIV care
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Fredericksen, Rob J, Fitzsimmons, Emma, Gibbons, Laura E, Dougherty, Sarah, Loo, Stephanie, Shurbaji, Sally, Batey, David S, Avendano-Soto, Sonia, Mathews, William C, Christopoulos, Katerina, Mayer, Kenneth H, Mugavero, Michael J, Crane, Paul K, and Crane, Heidi M
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Female ,Focus Groups ,HIV Infections ,Health Status ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Patients ,Psychometrics ,Quality of Life ,Social Support ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Social support ,HIV care ,patient-reported outcomes ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public Health ,Public health ,Sociology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Low perceived social support (SS) negatively impacts health outcomes. We developed a measure of perceived SS for use in HIV care. We sought and categorized legacy items, selecting strongest items within categories. We elicited SS concepts from patients in English/Spanish, coded transcripts to match item pool content, and developed new items for salient unrepresented content. In focus groups, patients prioritized highly-matched items. We conducted cognitive interviews on high-priority items, and validity testing on final items against two legacy measures. From interviews (n = 32), we matched the following concepts: sense of belonging/inclusion; communication; emotional support; feeling accepted by others as a person; companionship; and practical support. We identified a new concept: support from friends/family in remaining healthy. Focus groups (n = 23) prioritized emotional support, communication, and support to remain healthy. Cognitive interviews (n = 30) found items were well-understood. The final 8-item measure performed well with patients (n = 708), with good construct validity. We used an Item Response Theory program to create a 3-item Short Form version of the measure, which captures 96% of patients indicating low social support. We developed the Multifactoral Assessment of Perceived Social Support (MAPSS) and Short Form (MAPSS-SF); brief, clinically relevant, sufficiently unidimensional measures of SS for use in HIV care.
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- 2019
39. Mortality following myocardial infarction among HIV-infected persons: the Center for AIDS Research Network Of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS)
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Feinstein, Matthew J, Nance, Robin M, Delaney, JA Chris, Heckbert, Susan R, Budoff, Matthew J, Drozd, Daniel R, Burkholder, Greer A, Willig, James H, Mugavero, Michael J, Mathews, William C, Moore, Richard D, Eron, Joseph J, Napravnik, Sonia, Hunt, Peter W, Geng, Elvin, Hsue, Priscilla, Peter, Inga, Lober, William B, Crothers, Kristina, Grunfeld, Carl, Saag, Michael S, Kitahata, Mari M, Lloyd-Jones, Donald M, and Crane, Heidi M
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Epidemiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Infectious Diseases ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,Adult ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Community Networks ,Comorbidity ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Mortality ,Myocardial Infarction ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,United States ,Human immunodeficiency virus ,Myocardial infarction ,Cardiovascular diseases ,Multicenter study ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPersons with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have higher risks for myocardial infarction (MI) than the general population. This is driven in part by higher type 2 MI (T2MI, due to coronary supply-demand mismatch) rates among persons with HIV (PWH). In the general population, T2MI has higher mortality than type 1 MI (T1MI, spontaneous and generally due to plaque rupture and thrombosis). PWH have a greater burden of comorbidities and may therefore have an even greater excess risk for complication and death in the setting of T2MI. However, mortality patterns after T1MI and T2MI in HIV are unknown.MethodsWe analyzed mortality after MI among PWH enrolled in the multicenter, US-based Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) cohort (N = 28,186). Incident MIs occurring between January 1, 1996, and December 31, 2014, were centrally adjudicated and classified as T1MI or T2MI. We first compared mortality following T1MI vs. T2MI among PWH. Cox survival analyses and Bayesian model averaging were then used to evaluate pre-MI covariates associated with mortality following T1MI and T2MI.ResultsAmong the 596 out of 28,186 PWH who experienced MI (2.1%; 293 T1MI and 303 T2MI), mortality rates were significantly greater after T2MI (22.2/100 person-years; 1-, 3-, and 5-year mortality 39%, 52%, and 62%) than T1MI (8.2/100 person-years; 1-, 3-, and 5-year mortality 15%, 22%, and 30%). Significant mortality predictors after T1MI were higher HIV viral load, renal dysfunction, and older age. Significant predictors of mortality after T2MI were low body-mass index (BMI) and detectable HIV viral load.ConclusionsMortality is high following MI for PWH and substantially greater after T2MI than T1MI. Predictors of death after MI differed by type of MI, reinforcing the different clinical scenarios associated with each MI type and the importance of considering MI types separately.
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- 2019
40. Internalized HIV Stigma Is Associated With Concurrent Viremia and Poor Retention in a Cohort of US Patients in HIV Care.
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Christopoulos, Katerina A, Neilands, Torsten B, Hartogensis, Wendy, Geng, Elvin H, Sauceda, John, Mugavero, Michael J, Crane, Heidi M, Fredericksen, Rob J, Moore, Richard D, Mathews, William Christopher, Mayer, Kenneth H, Chander, Geetanjali, Hurt, Christopher B, and Johnson, Mallory O
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Social Determinants of Health ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Social Stigma ,Viremia ,HIV stigma ,virologic suppression ,retention in HIV care ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundThe relationship of internalized HIV stigma to key care cascade metrics in the United States is not well established using large-scale, geographically diverse data.SettingCenter for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) cohort study.MethodsBeginning in February 2016, we administered a yearly, validated 4-item internalized HIV stigma scale (response scale 1 = strongly disagree to 5 = strongly agree, Cronbach's alpha 0.91) at 7 CNICS sites and obtained cohort data through November 2017. We compared mean stigma levels by sociodemographic characteristics and used multivariable logistic regression, controlling for the same sociodemographic covariates, to evaluate the association between mean stigma and (1) concurrent viremia; (2) missed visits; and (3) poor visit constancy. We used inverse probability weighting (IPW) to account for differences between patients who did and did not undergo stigma assessment.ResultsOf 13,183 CNICS patients, 6448 (49%) underwent stigma assessment. Mean stigma was 1.99 (SD 1.07), and 28.6% agreed/strongly agreed with at least 1 stigma question. Patients younger than 50 years, racial/ethnic minorities, cis-women, and heterosexuals had higher mean stigma. Mean stigma score was associated with concurrent viremia [adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 1.13, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.02 to 1.25, P 0.02], missed visits (AOR 1.10, 95% CI: 1.02 to 1.19, P 0.01), and poor visit constancy, although the effect on visit constancy was attenuated in the IPW model (AOR 1.05, 95% CI: 0.98 to 1.13, P 0.17).ConclusionsHigher internalized HIV stigma had a modest but statistically significant association with concurrent viremia and poor retention in care. Further inquiry with prospective analyses is warranted.
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- 2019
41. Virologic Failure Among People Living With HIV Initiating Dolutegravir-Based Versus Other Recommended Regimens in Real-World Clinical Care Settings.
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Nance, Robin M, Vannappagari, Vani, Smith, Kimberly, Johannes, Catherine B, Calingaert, Brian, Saltus, Catherine W, Mayer, Kenneth H, Whitney, Bridget M, Rodriguez, Benigno, Moore, Richard D, Eron, Joseph J, Geng, Elvin, Mathews, William Christopher, Mugavero, Michael J, Saag, Michael S, Kitahata, Mari M, Delaney, Joseph AC, and Crane, Heidi M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Infection ,Adult ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Drug Therapy ,Combination ,Female ,HIV Infections ,HIV Integrase Inhibitors ,Heterocyclic Compounds ,3-Ring ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Oxazines ,Piperazines ,Pyridones ,Treatment Failure ,viral failure ,viremia ,dolutegravir ,viral load ,viral suppression ,darunavir ,integrase strand transfer inhibitors ,antiretroviral therapy ,virologic failure ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundGuidelines for initial antiretroviral treatment (ART) regimens have evolved, with integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) increasingly prominent. Research on virologic failure (VF) with INSTI therapy is predominantly from clinical trials not care settings, especially for recently approved medications including dolutegravir. We compared outcomes among people living with HIV (PLWH) who initiated recommended regimens in clinical care across the United States.SettingWe examined 2 groups of PLWH at 8 clinics who initiated ART regimens (August 1, 2013-March 31, 2017): those ART treatment-naive at initiation, and those treatment-experienced.MethodsThe outcome in this longitudinal cohort study was VF, defined as a viral load of ≥400 copies/mL ≥6 months after ART initiation. We examined the proportion of individuals who remained on, switched, or discontinued the regimen. Associations between regimens and outcomes were examined with adjusted Cox proportional hazards models.ResultsAmong 5177 PLWH, a lower proportion experienced VF on dolutegravir- versus other INSTI- or darunavir-based regimens for previously treatment-naive (7% vs. 12% vs. 28%) and treatment-experienced PLWH (6% vs. 10% vs. 21%). In adjusted analyses, hazard ratios were similar across regimens for the combined outcome of regimen discontinuation or treatment switch. The hazard ratios for VF comparing dolutegravir- to darunavir-based regimens was 0.30 (95% CI: 0.2 to 0.6) among previously treatment-naive PLWH and was 0.60 (95% CI: 0.4 to 0.8) among treatment-experienced PLWH.ConclusionsThe proportion of previously treatment-naive PLWH remaining on recommended ART regimens did not differ by regimen. The likelihood of VF was lower with dolutegravir- than darunavir-based regimens for previously treatment-naive and treatment-experienced PLWH.
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- 2019
42. Emulating a trial of joint dynamic strategies: An application to monitoring and treatment of HIV‐positive individuals
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Caniglia, Ellen C, Robins, James M, Cain, Lauren E, Sabin, Caroline, Logan, Roger, Abgrall, Sophie, Mugavero, Michael J, Hernández‐Díaz, Sonia, Meyer, Laurence, Seng, Remonie, Drozd, Daniel R, Seage, George R, Bonnet, Fabrice, Le Marec, Fabien, Moore, Richard D, Reiss, Peter, van Sighem, Ard, Mathews, William C, Jarrín, Inma, Alejos, Belén, Deeks, Steven G, Muga, Roberto, Boswell, Stephen L, Ferrer, Elena, Eron, Joseph J, Gill, John, Pacheco, Antonio, Grinsztejn, Beatriz, Napravnik, Sonia, Jose, Sophie, Phillips, Andrew, Justice, Amy, Tate, Janet, Bucher, Heiner C, Egger, Matthias, Furrer, Hansjakob, Miro, Jose M, Casabona, Jordi, Porter, Kholoud, Touloumi, Giota, Crane, Heidi, Costagliola, Dominique, Saag, Michael, and Hernán, Miguel A
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Epidemiology ,Statistics ,Health Sciences ,Mathematical Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Infection ,Adult ,Anti-HIV Agents ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Decision Making ,Drug Monitoring ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,RNA ,Viral ,Research Design ,Survival Analysis ,Viral Load ,causal inference ,dynamic regime ,joint treatment strategies ,marginal structural model ,no direct effect ,Public Health and Health Services ,Statistics & Probability - Abstract
Decisions about when to start or switch a therapy often depend on the frequency with which individuals are monitored or tested. For example, the optimal time to switch antiretroviral therapy depends on the frequency with which HIV-positive individuals have HIV RNA measured. This paper describes an approach to use observational data for the comparison of joint monitoring and treatment strategies and applies the method to a clinically relevant question in HIV research: when can monitoring frequency be decreased and when should individuals switch from a first-line treatment regimen to a new regimen? We outline the target trial that would compare the dynamic strategies of interest and then describe how to emulate it using data from HIV-positive individuals included in the HIV-CAUSAL Collaboration and the Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems. When, as in our example, few individuals follow the dynamic strategies of interest over long periods of follow-up, we describe how to leverage an additional assumption: no direct effect of monitoring on the outcome of interest. We compare our results with and without the "no direct effect" assumption. We found little differences on survival and AIDS-free survival between strategies where monitoring frequency was decreased at a CD4 threshold of 350 cells/μl compared with 500 cells/μl and where treatment was switched at an HIV-RNA threshold of 1000 copies/ml compared with 200 copies/ml. The "no direct effect" assumption resulted in efficiency improvements for the risk difference estimates ranging from an 7- to 53-fold increase in the effective sample size.
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- 2019
43. Detecting Disengagement From HIV Care Before It Is Too Late: Development and Preliminary Validation of a Novel Index of Engagement in HIV Care.
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Johnson, Mallory O, Neilands, Torsten B, Koester, Kimberly A, Wood, Troy, Sauceda, John A, Dilworth, Samantha E, Mugavero, Michael J, Crane, Heidi M, Fredericksen, Rob J, Mayer, Kenneth H, Mathews, William C, Moore, Richard D, Napravnik, Sonia, and Christopoulos, Katerina A
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Mental Health ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Anxiety ,Depression ,Female ,Focus Groups ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Internet ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Patient Participation ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Retention in Care ,Self Report ,Social Media ,Social Stigma ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Treatment Outcome ,Viral Load ,Young Adult ,engagement in care ,adherence to care ,retention in care ,clinical assessments ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundEngagement in care is critical to achieving and sustaining optimal benefits of efficacious antiretroviral therapies for HIV infection. Current metrics of engagement in care, including problematic patterns of retention in care, adherence to treatment, and viral suppression, are often detected late in the disengagement process. We sought to develop and validate a patient-centered screener of engagement in care that can be used to identify deficits in patient perceptions of engagement before the development of poor outcomes, including loss to follow-up, treatment nonadherence, virologic failure, and the resulting increased likelihood of HIV-associated morbidity and mortality and onward transmission of HIV.Setting and methodsUsing input from patients, providers, and researchers through in-person focus groups and an online Delphi process, we developed a self-report measure of engagement in care that was validated with 3296 patients from 7 clinics across the United States.ResultsResults supported a single dimension of engagement in care measured by 10 items. Lower scores on the HIV Index were related to higher depression and anxiety symptoms, greater use of alcohol and stimulants, and increased likelihood of reporting internalized HIV stigma. Higher Index scores were positively associated with self-report measures of antiretroviral therapy adherence, corroborative clinic records documenting appointment attendance, and increased likelihood of recent viral load suppression.ConclusionsThe HIV Index offers promise as a patient-centered diagnostic and prognostic screener for engagement in care that can be used to trigger interventions to promote better clinical outcomes for persons living with HIV.
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- 2019
44. Brief Report: Kidney Dysfunction Does Not Contribute Significantly to Antiretroviral Therapy Modification in Treatment-Naive PLWH Receiving Initial ART.
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Eaton, Ellen F, Tamhane, Ashutosh, Davy-Mendez, Thibaut, Moore, Richard D, Mathews, W Christopher, Saag, Michael S, Mugavero, Michael J, Wyatt, Christina M, and Gutierrez, Orlando M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Kidney Disease ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Adult ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Drug Substitution ,Female ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Kidney Diseases ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,kidney dysfunction ,HIV ,antiretroviral therapy ,durability ,tenofovir ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundAntiretroviral therapy (ART) durability, time to modification or cessation, has declined. The study objective was to determine whether kidney dysfunction is contributing to reduced durability.MethodsThis retrospective follow-up study of CNICS evaluated treatment-naive PLWH initiating ART between 2007 and 2014. Regimen modification was defined as cessation/modification of any part of the 3-drug ART regimen. We evaluated the role of kidney dysfunction in initial regimen modification as both a mediator and effect measure modifier. Associations of the variables with the ART modification were examined using univariable and multivariable Cox proportional hazard models.ResultsOf 4515 PLWH included in the analysis, 1967 modified their ART. Of those receiving TDF-based ART (n = 3888), 1580 (41%) modified their regimen compared with 387 (62%) receiving other regimens. Overall, the median eGFR decreased by 5 mL/min/1.73 m (quartiles: first = -16, third = 0) from baseline to follow-up. Of the 128 patients with low baseline eGFR (
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- 2019
45. Compound Retention in Care and All-Cause Mortality among People Living with HIV
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Kay, Emma Sophia, Batey, D Scott, Westfall, Andrew O, Christopoulos, Katerina, Cole, Stephen R, Geng, Elvin H, Mathews, W Christopher, Moore, Richard D, and Mugavero, Michael J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,hazard ratio ,mortality hazards ,retention in care ,Clinical sciences ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
BackgroundTo obtain optimal health outcomes, persons living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) must be retained in clinical care. We examined the relationships between 4 possible combinations of 2 separate retention measures (missed visits and the Institute of Medicine [IOM] indicator) and all-cause mortality.MethodsThe sample included 4162 antiretroviral therapy (ART)-naive patients who started ART between January 2000 and July 2010 at any of 5 US sites of the Center for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems. The independent variable of interest was retention, captured over the 12-month period after the initiation of ART. The study outcome, all-cause mortality 1 year after ART initiation, was determined by querying the Social Security Death Index or the National Death Index. We evaluated the associations of the 4 categories of retention with all-cause mortality, using the Cox proportional hazards models.ResultsTen percent of patients did not meet retention standards for either measure (hazard ratio [HR], 2.26; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.59-3.21). Patients retained by the IOM but not the missed-visits measure (42%) had a higher HR for mortality (1.72; 95% CI, 1.33-2.21) than patients retained by both measures (41%). Patients retained by the missed-visits but not the IOM measure (6%) had the same mortality hazards as patients retained by both measures (HR, 1.01; 95% CI, .54-1.87).ConclusionsMissed visits within the first 12 months of ART initiation are a major risk factor for subsequent death. Incorporating missed visits in clinical and public health retention and viral suppression programming is advised.
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- 2019
46. Association of immunosuppression and HIV viraemia with non-Hodgkin lymphoma risk overall and by subtype in people living with HIV in Canada and the USA: a multicentre cohort study
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Hernández-Ramírez, Raúl U, Qin, Li, Lin, Haiqun, Leyden, Wendy, Neugebauer, Romain S, Althoff, Keri N, Achenbach, Chad J, Hessol, Nancy A, D'Souza, Gypsyamber, Gebo, Kelly A, Gill, M John, Grover, Surbhi, Horberg, Michael A, Li, Jun, Mathews, W Christopher, Mayor, Angel M, Park, Lesley S, Rabkin, Charles S, Salters, Kate, Justice, Amy C, Moore, Richard D, Engels, Eric A, Silverberg, Michael J, Dubrow, Robert, AIDS, North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design of the International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate, Betts, Adrian, Brooks, John T, Freeman, Aimee M, Van Rompaey, Stephen E, Burchell, Ann, Yip, Benita, You, Bin, Hogan, Brenna, Grasso, Chris, Hogg, Robert S, Benson, Constance A, Drozd, Daniel R, Sterling, Timothy R, Haas, David, Humes, Elizabeth, Crane, Heidi M, Willig, James, Eron, Joseph J, Martin, Jeffrey N, Saag, Michael S, Jing, Jerry, Zhang, Jinbing, Lindsay, Joanne, Hunter-Mellado, Robert F, Deeks, Steven G, Zhu, Julia, Montaner, Julio SG, McReynolds, Justin, Gabler, Karyn, Buchacz, Kate, Rodriguez, Benigno, Thorne, Jennifer E, Margolick, Joseph B, Anastos, Kathryn, Jacobson, Lisa P, Klein, Marina B, Kroch, Abigail, Morton, Liz, Turner, Megan, Fiellin, David, Gange, Stephen J, Mugavero, Michael J, Harrigan, P Richard, Rebeiro, Peter, Bosch, Ronald J, Kirk, Gregory D, Mayer, Kenneth H, McKaig, Rosemary G, Coburn, Sally, Napravnik, Sonia, Kitahata, Mari M, Lober, William B, and Lee, Jennifer S
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Prevention ,Lymphoma ,Rare Diseases ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Hematology ,Lymphatic Research ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Canada ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Immune Tolerance ,Lymphoma ,Non-Hodgkin ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Risk Assessment ,United States ,Viral Load ,Young Adult ,North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design of the International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate AIDS ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundResearch is needed to better understand relations between immunosuppression and HIV viraemia and risk for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a common cancer in people living with HIV. We aimed to identify key CD4 count and HIV RNA (viral load) predictors of risk for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, overall and by subtype.MethodsWe studied people living with HIV during 1996-2014 from 21 Canadian and US cohorts participating in the North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design. To determine key independent predictors of risk for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, we assessed associations with time-updated recent, past, cumulative, and nadir or peak measures of CD4 count and viral load, using demographics-adjusted, cohort-stratified Cox models, and we compared models using Akaike's information criterion.FindingsOf 102 131 people living with HIV during the study period, 712 people developed non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The key independent predictors of risk for overall non-Hodgkin lymphoma were recent CD4 count (ie, lagged by 6 months;
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- 2019
47. The influence of the 'good' patient ideal on engagement in HIV care
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Koester, Kimberly A, Johnson, Mallory O, Wood, Troy, Fredericksen, Rob, Neilands, Torsten B, Sauceda, John, Crane, Heidi M, Mugavero, Michael J, Christopoulos, Katerina A, and Caylà , Joan A
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- 2019
48. Do Symptoms of Depression Interact with Substance Use to Affect HIV Continuum of Care Outcomes?
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Fojo, Anthony T, Lesko, Catherine R, Calkins, Keri L, Moore, Richard D, McCaul, Mary E, Hutton, Heidi E, Mathews, William C, Crane, Heidi, Christopoulos, Katerina, Cropsey, Karen, Mugavero, Michael J, Mayer, Kenneth, Pence, Brian W, Lau, Bryan, and Chander, Geetanjali
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Mental Health ,Depression ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Health Services ,Substance Misuse ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Alcohol Drinking ,Alcoholism ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Female ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Compliance ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Treatment Outcome ,Alcohol ,Illicit drug use ,Viral suppression ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social Work ,Public health - Abstract
Few studies examine how depression and substance use interact to affect HIV control. In 14,380 persons with HIV (PWH), we used logistic regression and generalized estimating equations to evaluate how symptoms of depression interact with alcohol, cocaine, opioid, and methamphetamine use to affect subsequent retention in care, maintaining an active prescription for ART, and consistent virologic suppression. Among PWH with no or mild depressive symptoms, heavy alcohol use had no association with virologic suppression (OR 1.00 [0.95-1.06]); among those with moderate or severe symptoms, it was associated with reduced viral suppression (OR 0.80 [0.74-0.87]). We found no interactions with heavy alcohol use on retention in care or maintaining ART prescription or with other substances for any outcome. These results highlight the importance of treating moderate or severe depression in PWH, especially with comorbid heavy alcohol use, and support multifaceted interventions targeting alcohol use and depression.
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- 2019
49. One Size Fits (n)One: The Influence of Sex, Age, and Sexual Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Acquisition Risk on Racial/Ethnic Disparities in the HIV Care Continuum in the United States
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Desir, Fidel A, Lesko, Catherine R, Moore, Richard D, Horberg, Michael A, Wong, Cherise, Crane, Heidi M, Silverberg, Michael, Thorne, Jennifer E, Rachlis, Beth, Rabkin, Charles, Mayor, Angel M, Mathews, William C, Althoff, Keri N, Benson, Constance A, Bosch, Ronald J, Fenway, Gregory D Kirk, Boswell, Stephen, Mayer, Kenneth H, Grasso, Chris, Hogg, Robert S, Harrigan, P Richard, Montaner, Julio SG, Yip, Benita, Zhu, Julia, Salters, Kate, Gabler, Karyn, Buchacz, Kate, Brooks, John T, Gebo, Kelly A, Carey, John T, Rodriguez, Benigno, Silverberg, Michael J, Margolick, Joseph B, Jacobson, Lisa P, D’Souza, Gypsyamber, Klein, Marina B, Kroch, Abigail, Burchell, Ann, Rachlis, Anita, Cupido, Patrick, Lindsay, Joanne, Hunter-Mellado, Robert F, Gill, M John, Deeks, Steven G, Martin, Jeffrey N, Patel, Pragna, Saag, Michael S, Mugavero, Michael J, Willig, James, Eron, Joseph J, Napravnik, Sonia, Kitahata, Mari M, Drozd, Daniel R, Sterling, Timothy R, Haas, David, Rebeiro, Peter, Turner, Megan, Bebawy, Sally, Rogers, Ben, Justice, Amy C, Dubrow, Robert, Fiellin, David, Gange, Stephen J, Anastos, Kathryn, McKaig, Rosemary G, Freeman, Aimee M, Lent, Carol, Van Rompaey, Stephen E, Morton, Liz, McReynolds, Justin, Lober, William B, Lee, Jennifer S, You, Bin, Hogan, Brenna, Zhang, Jinbing, and Jing, Jerry
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Health Disparities ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Minority Health ,Infection ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Cohort Studies ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Ethnicity ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Racial Groups ,Risk Factors ,Sexual Behavior ,United States ,Viral Load ,Young Adult ,HIV care continuum ,racial/ethnic disparities ,key populations ,North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design (NA-ACCORD) Region of the International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA) Consortium ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe United States National HIV/AIDS Strategy established goals to reduce disparities in retention in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care, antiretroviral therapy (ART) use, and viral suppression. The impact of sex, age, and sexual HIV acquisition risk (ie, heterosexual vs same-sex contact) on the magnitude of HIV-related racial/ethnic disparities is not well understood.MethodsWe estimated age-stratified racial/ethnic differences in the 5-year restricted mean percentage of person-time spent in care, on ART, and virally suppressed among 19 521 women (21.4%), men who have sex with men (MSM; 59.0%), and men who have sex with women (MSW; 19.6%) entering HIV care in the North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design between 2004 and 2014.ResultsAmong women aged 18-29 years, whites spent 12.0% (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1%-20.2%), 9.2% (95% CI, .4%-20.4%), and 13.5% (95% CI, 2.7%-22.5%) less person-time in care, on ART, and virally suppressed, respectively, than Hispanics. Black MSM aged ≥50 years spent 6.3% (95% CI, 1.3%-11.7%), 11.0% (95% CI, 4.6%-18.1%), and 9.7% (95% CI, 3.6%-16.8%) less person-time in these stages, respectively, than white MSM ≥50 years of age. Among MSM aged 40-49 years, blacks spent 9.8% (95% CI, 2.4%-16.5%) and 11.9% (95% CI, 3.8%-19.3%) less person-time on ART and virally suppressed, respectively, than whites.ConclusionsRacial/ethnic differences in HIV care persist in specific populations defined by sex, age, and sexual HIV acquisition risk. Clinical and public health interventions that jointly target these demographic factors are needed.
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- 2019
50. Who Will Show? Predicting Missed Visits Among Patients in Routine HIV Primary Care in the United States
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Pence, Brian W, Bengtson, Angela M, Boswell, Stephen, Christopoulos, Katerina A, Crane, Heidi M, Geng, Elvin, Keruly, Jeanne C, Mathews, W Christopher, and Mugavero, Michael J
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Appointments and Schedules ,Female ,Forecasting ,HIV Infections ,Health Behavior ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Office Visits ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Patient Compliance ,Primary Health Care ,United States ,Young Adult ,HIV ,Retention in care ,Missed visits ,Appointment attendance ,Predictive models ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social Work ,Public health - Abstract
Missed HIV medical visits predict poor clinical outcomes. We sought to identify patients at high risk of missing visits. We analyzed 2002-2014 data from six large US HIV clinics. At each visit, we predicted the likelihood of missing the next scheduled visit using demographic, clinical, and patient-reported psychosocial variables. Overall, 10,374 participants contributed 105,628 HIV visits. For 17% of visits, the next scheduled appointment was missed. The strongest predictor of a future missed visit was past-year missed visits. A model with only this predictor had area under the receiver operator curve = 0.65; defining "high risk" as those with any past-year missed visits had 73% sensitivity and 51% specificity in correctly identifying a future missed visit. Inclusion of other clinical and psychosocial predictors only slightly improved performance. Past visit attendance can identify those at increased risk for future missed visits, allowing for proactive allocation of resources to those at greatest risk.
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- 2019
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