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Effects of drug and hazardous alcohol use on having a detectable HIV viral load: An adherence mediation analysis.
Cachay, Edward R; Moges, Tesfaye S; Qin, Huifang; Bamford, Laura; Grelotti, David J; Mathews, Wm Christopher.
  • Cachay ER; Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease and Global Public Health, Owen Clinic, UC San Diego School of Medicine, United States.
  • Moges TS; Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease and Global Public Health, Owen Clinic, UC San Diego School of Medicine, United States.
  • Qin H; Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease and Global Public Health, Owen Clinic, UC San Diego School of Medicine, United States.
  • Bamford L; Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease and Global Public Health, Owen Clinic, UC San Diego School of Medicine, United States.
  • Grelotti DJ; HIV Neurobehavioral Research Program, Department of Psychiatry, UC San Diego School of Medicine, United States.
  • Mathews WC; Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease and Global Public Health, Owen Clinic, UC San Diego School of Medicine, United States.
Addict Behav Rep ; 17: 100486, 2023 Jun.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36950716
ABSTRACT

Objectives:

People living with HIV (PWH) with substance or alcohol use often have unsuppressed plasma HIV viral loads (pVL). The degree to which substance and alcohol use effects on HIV viral suppression are mediated through medication nonadherence is incompletely understood.

Methods:

We included PWH prescribed antiretroviral therapy and receiving care at an academic HIV clinic between 2014 and 2018 who completed both patient-reported outcomes (PRO) questionnaires and had subsequent pVL measurements. Measures included assessments of alcohol use (AUDIT-C), drug use (NIDA-ASSIST), and self-reported adherence measured using four different methods. Substances found in bivariate analysis to predict detectable pVL were modeled separately for mediation effects through adherence. We report natural direct (NDE) and indirect effect (NIE), marginal total effect (MTE), and percentage mediated.

Results:

Among 3125 PWH who met eligibility criteria, 25.8% reported hazardous alcohol use, 27.1% cannabis, 13.1% amphetamines, 1.9% inhalants, 5.3% cocaine, 4.5% sedative-hypnotics, 2.9% opioids, and 2.3% hallucinogens. Excellent adherence was reported by 58% of PWH, and 10% had detectable pVL. Except for sedatives, using other substances was significantly associated with worse adherence. Bivariate predictors of detectable pVL were [OR (95% CI)] amphetamine use 2.4 (1.8-3.2) and opioid use 2.3 (1.3-4.0). The percent of marginal total effect mediated by nonadherence varied by substance 36% for amphetamine use, 27% for opioid use, and 39% for polysubstance use.

Conclusion:

Use of amphetamines, opioids, and multiple substances predicted detectable pVL. Up to 40% of their effects were mediated by self-reported nonadherence. Confirmation using longitudinal measurement models will strengthen causal inference from this cross-sectional analysis.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies / Risk_factors_studies Idioma: En Año: 2023 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies / Risk_factors_studies Idioma: En Año: 2023 Tipo del documento: Article