1. Effect of antiretroviral therapy on retention of people living with HIV in India (2012–2017): a retrospective, cohort studyResearch in context
- Author
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Shweta Chidrawar, Suvarna Sane, Megha Mamulwar, Shilpa Bembalkar, Rachna Thakur, Tarun Bhatnagar, Srikanth P. Tripathy, Shrinivasa B. Marinaik, Damodar Sahu, Subrata Biswas, Shanta Datta, Yogesh Sabde, Rajnarayan Tiwari, Deepak Khismatrao, Bhawani Singh Kushwaha, Anoop Kumar Puri, Chinmoyee Das, Sheela V. Godbole, Sheela Godbole, Rachana Thakur, P.K. Bhavani, B.M. Shrinivasa, S. Dutta, Rajnarayan R. Tiwari, Samiran Panda, Smita Kulkarni, Manisha Ghate, Radhika Brahme, Rajesh Yadav, Amit Nirmalkar, Shradha Gurav, D.C.S. Reddy, Yujwal Raj, Manoj Murhekar, K. Boopathi, M. Vishnu Vardhana Rao, Arvind Pandey, Saritha Nair, Indrani Gupta, Avantika Ranjan, Naresh Goel, R.S. Gupta, Manish Bamrotiya, and Neha Garg
- Subjects
ART ,India ,Lost to follow-up ,National programme ,People living with HIV ,PLHIV ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: India's free antiretroviral therapy (ART) programme was initiated in 2004. People living with HIV who were registered with ART centres (ARTC) were initiated on ART based on the CD4 count cutoffs as per prevailing guidelines. The others with higher counts remained on six-monthly follow up. We estimated retention rates among people living with HIV receiving ART in the programme and their determinants during 2012–2017. Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, the records of people living with HIV aged ≥15 years, registered between April 2012 and March 2017 (reference period) in 81 of 396 ARTC across 33 Indian states were reviewed. ‘People living with HIV not on ART’ were defined as all those who were registered but not eligible for ART initiation or not started ART through the reference period. ‘People living with HIV on ART’ were those who were already on ART or initiated on ART as per prevailing guidelines. Relevant data from the clinic records were extracted and analysed for ‘Not on ART’ and ‘On ART’ groups separately using life-table method, Cox proportional hazards model to estimate retention probability and potential determinants. Findings: Of 154,154 registered people living with HIV, 82.3% received ART (‘on ART’) during 2012–2017. Proportion retained was lower among ‘not on ART’ vs ‘on ART’ people living with HIV and was statistically significant (71.1% vs 88.9%, p
- Published
- 2025
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