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Patient-reported and physician-estimated adherence to HAART
Authors:Dr. Rita Murri MD  Adriana Ammassari MD  Maria Paola Trotta MD  Andrea De Luca MD  Sara Melzi MD  Cristina Minardi MD  Mauro Zaccarelli MD  Patrizia Rellecati MD  Paola Santopadre MD  Fabrizio Soscia MD  Antonio Scasso MD  Valerio Tozzi MD  Maria Ciardi MD  Gian Carlo Orofino MD  Pasquale Noto MD  Antonella d’Arminio Monforte MD  Andrea Antinori MD  Albert W. Wu MD   MPH
Affiliation:Clinica delle Malattie Infettive, Università Cattolica del S. Cuore, 00168 Rome, Italy. ritamurri@libero.it
Abstract:OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the rate of discordance between patients and physicians on adherence to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) and identify factors related to discordance in these two assessments. DESIGN: Prospective, multicenter, cohort study (AdICONA) nested within the Italian Cohort Naive Antiretrovirals (ICONA) study. SETTING: Tertiary clinical centers. PARTICIPANTS: The patients filled out a 16-item self-administered questionnaire on adherence to HAART. At the same time, physicians estimated the current HAART adherence of their patient. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Discordance between patient and physician on adherence to antiretroviral therapy. RESULTS: From May 1999 to March 2000, 320 paired patient-physician assessments were obtained. Patients had a mean plasma HIV RNA of 315 copies/ml (64% had undetectable HIV RNA) and a mean CD4+ cell count of 577 cells x 10(6)/L. Nonadherence was reported by 30.9% of patients and estimated by physicians in 45.0% cases. In 111 cases (34.7%), patients and physicians were discordant on adherence to HAART. Kappa statistics was 0.27. Using patient-assessed adherence as reference, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of physician-estimated adherence were 64.7%, 66.6%, 81.2%, and 45.8%, respectively. On multivariable analysis, low education level, unemployment, absence of a social worker in the clinical center, and unavailability of afternoon visits were significantly correlated with patient-physician discordance on adherence to antiretrovirals. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians did not correctly estimate patient-reported adherence to HAART in more than one third of patients. Both social variables and factors related to the clinical center were important predictors of discordance between patients and physicians. Interventions to enhance adherence should include strategies addressed to improve patient-physician relationship.
Keywords:compliance    AIDS/HIV    doctor-patient relationship    quality of care    health care service
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