退伍军人对丙型肝炎病毒治疗成功依从性的患者认知

GastroHep Pub Date : 2021-07-06 DOI:10.1002/ygh2.474
Grace Y. Zhang, Krupa Patel, Olufunso Agbalajobi, Wheytnie Alexandre, Andrea Reid, Marina Serper, Linda Calgaro, Susan Zickmund, Tami Coppler, Margaret Mizah, Obaid Shaikh, Shari Rogal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景坚持治疗仍然是到2030年实现人群水平丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)消除的潜在障碍。我们旨在了解直接作用抗病毒(DAA)治疗前后HCV治疗依从性的障碍和促进因素。方法一组开始DAA治疗的美国退伍军人完成了治疗前和治疗后的调查,评估了人口统计学信息、心理症状和对依从性的感知障碍。DAA依从性通过自我报告和药房记录进行评估。使用病历评估持续病毒学应答(SVR)。Mann-Whitney U、Fisher精确检验和逻辑回归用于评估患者特征和调查反应与依从性和SVR的相关性。结果在97名参与者中,大多数是男性(98%)、白人(62%)、低收入(低于35000人/年;82%),并且有自我报告的既往药物使用史(93%)。治疗前最常见的预期粘附障碍是副作用(21%)。在随访中,62%的参与者错过了剂量,84%的参与者实现了SVR。疼痛减轻(OR 0.32,95%CI 1.06-1.72),同意“药物会改善我的健康”(OR 4,95%CI 1.22-15.8),不同意“担心我的肝病恶化”(OR 0.2,95%CI 0.05,0.59),预测成功实现SVR。治疗后,最常见的依从性障碍是忙碌(13%)和离家(13%)。退伍军人报告称,治疗后药物使用量无显著下降(38%对28%,P=.18)。结论在药物使用率高的退伍军人群体中,大多数参与者错过了剂量,但仍达到SVR。丙型肝炎病毒治疗也可以作为药物使用治疗的机会。
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Patient perceptions of successful hepatitis C virus treatment adherence in Veterans

Background

Treatment adherence remains a potential barrier to achieving population-level hepatitis C virus (HCV) elimination by 2030. We aimed to understand barriers to and facilitators of HCV treatment adherence pre- and post-direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment.

Methods

A cohort of US Veterans who were initiating DAA treatment completed pre- and post-treatment surveys assessing demographic information, psychological symptoms and perceived barriers to adherence. DAA adherence was assessed through self-report and pharmacy records. Sustained virologic response (SVR) was evaluated using the medical record. Mann-Whitney U, Fisher's exact tests, and logistic regression were employed to evaluate associations of patient characteristics and survey responses with adherence and SVR.

Results

Of 97 participants, the majority were male (98%), white (62%), low-income (less than 35 000/y; 82%), and had a history of self-reported prior substance use (93%). The most common anticipated adherence barrier prior to treatment was having side effects (21%). Over follow-up, 62% of participants missed doses and 84% achieved SVR. Decreased pain (OR 0.32, 95% CI 1.06-1.72), agreeing with ‘the medication will improve my health’ (OR 4, 95% CI 1.22-15.8) and disagreeing with being ‘worried about my liver disease getting worse’ (OR 0.2, 95% CI 0.05, 0.59) predicted successfully achieving SVR. After treatment, the most commonly reported barriers to adherence were being busy (13%) and being away from home (13%). Veterans reported non-significantly decreased substance use after treatment (38% vs 28%, P = .18).

Conclusion

In this population of Veterans with high rates of substance use, most participants missed doses but still achieved SVR. HCV treatment may also serve as an opportunity for substance use treatment.

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