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ADHERENCE Patrick Desmet HIV / Therapycounselor D V D - Testimonies • 1. What is adherence and why is it important? • 2. The factors that influence adherence? • 3. How can we improve adherence? • “ …Stick to the times, having the right amount of drugs at all times in the system. Otherwise the virus will breakthrough and starts multiplying again…” • “…Never missed a dose during my pregnancy…” • “…Taking your medication as directed, to have a sufficient dose that will have the desired effect…” • “…The ability to take your drugs to an extent that they will work…” What is Adherence ? The medication adherence is the ability of the patient to be involved in: choosing , starting, managing and maintaining a given therapeutic combination regimen to control viral replication and improve the immune function. Jane M.Simoni Ph D • “ …Stick to the times, having the right amount of drugs at all times in the system. Otherwise the virus will breakthrough and starts multiplying again….” • “ …Taking your medication as directed, to have a sufficient dose that will have the desired effect…..” Electronic Event Monitoring (MEMS®) 24:00 Time 20:00 16:00 12:00 08:00 04:00 6 10 14 18 22 26 30 September 4 8 12 16 20 24 28 October Fabienne Dobbels UZ Leuven “….Otherwise the virus will breakthrough and starts multiplying again” Patients Reaching Undetectable HIV RNA LOQ 400 (%) Relationship of adherence (measured by MEMS® 81 patients / 45397 doses / 6 months of FU ) to virologic success 100 Mean adherence rate 78 P = <0.001 75 45 50 33 29 25 18 0 >95% 90%-95% 80%-90% 70%-80% <70% Greatest danger zone for developing resistance Adapted from: Paterson DL et al. Ann Intern Med 2000;133: 21-30 •“ …Taking your medication as directed, to have a sufficient dose that will have the desired effect….” Log concentration (ng/mL) 10000 1000 Half life: >12 hours 100 Even 48 hours post-dose, plasma levels remain above EC50 10 1 day 1 dose day 2 dose day 3 dose day 4 miss Examples: EFV, TDF, ddI, Atazanavir day 5 dose EC50 ADHERENCE vs. PHARMACY REFILLS Objective : HIV-disease progression / AIDS vs. Adherence Methods : • 950 patients ARV naive • (85% PI and 15%NNRTI) + 2NRTI • Median follow-up 13 months • Pharmacy based records, refills Conclusion For each 10% decline in adherence 16% increase in mortality Hogg et al.7th CROI 2000/abs73. • “ …It’s difficult when I need to go to an event, wedding, party, …. Anytime where you are exposed taking your drugs…” Disclosure “… Absolutely terrible, it was worse going to therapy than having my AIDS diagnosis. For me it was the slippery slope downhill…” Anxiety • “…I forgot my medication for days, because I was living a very hard life. My mind was thinking of many other things than medication….” • “….It was the most difficult thing I had to do in my life…” • “… I was never been sick since my diagnosis it was very difficult to convince myself to start up therapy…” Motivation MOTIVATION ESTABLISH : READINESS COMMITMENT ASYMPTOMATIC MOTIVATION vs. LONG-TERM TREATMENT SYMPTOMATIC • Preventive Measures MOTIVATION • Reinforce the Necessity • ART-SE Distress ART Stop = SE Relief • OI-status, Pill Burden, Drug-drug Interactions • “…Somethimes I rush to work, because there is an important meeting I need to go to and I forgot to take my medication…” • “…Yes sometimes I forgot them because I was not at home and I was in a rush…” Anticipation Why do Patients Miss Doses? % 0 10 20 30 40 50 52 Too busy/simply forgot 46 Away from home 27 Felt depressed/overwhelmed Took drug holiday/medication break 20 Ran out of medication 20 Too many pills 19 Worried about becoming 'immune' 19 Reasons given for missing antiretroviral doses (structured questionnaire) 18 Felt drug was too toxic Wanted to avoid side effects 17 Didn't want others to notice 17 16 Reminder of HIV infection 14 Confused about dosage direction 13 Didn't think it was improving health Were told the medicine is no good n=133 45 Change in daily routine To make it last longer 60 10 9 Adapted from: Gifford AL et al. JAIDS 2000; 23: 386-395 possible interventions simplify dosing schedule decrease pill burden other ADHERENCE PATIENT FACTORS •Denial HIV- status •Negative beliefs (negative arv history partner) •Fear of Short or Longterm - Side Effects •Lack off trust towards Health-Care team •ARV = ongoing reminder of HIV status HEALTHCARE FACTORS • STAFF TRAINING • INSUFFICIENT STAFF & SPACE for COUNSELLING • CONFLICTING PATIENT-INFORMATION (EDUCATION) • CONFIDENTIALITY (reception, waiting rooms, personalised interviews vs. Multidisciplinary team) • POOR ORGANIZATION OF DAILY CARE •AUTHORITARIAN AND JUDGEMENTAL ATTITUDE Cultural and Socio-economic Status •Welfare status: housing, financial support… •Fear of Disclosure : ARV > trigger HIV-Status •Stigmatisation : cultural / religious beliefs •Drug (speed, ecstasy…) and Alcohol use TREATMENT FACTORS • DRUG TOXICITIES: SHORT AND LONGTERM SE • COMPLEX REGIMEN / PILL BURDEN • DOSING FREQUENCY / DRUG INTERACTIONS • DIETARY RESTRICTIONS • LOGISTICAL : APPROVALS / AVAILABILITY OF DRUGS • CONCOMITANT /ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE • ACCUMULATIVE TREATMENT CHANGES “…It’s incredible important to get the right regimen for the right person, it’s really about looking at the individual patient….” “…As a patient I need much more information…” “…You need to prepare the patient properly…” Fit the ARV’s into the lifestyle BASIC KNOWLEDGE PATIENT HEALTH BELIEFS & CULTURAL / SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS EMPOWERMENT SKILLS & MOTIVATION Flow Chart Counseling New HIV+ 3 STEP APPROACH = a stepwise informationflow OPTIMISING HAART TRUST KNOWLEDGE LIFESTYLE Potential ADHERENCE and ARV-BARRIERS DYNAMIC MONITORING PEOPLES LIVES = VARIABLE BEHAVIOR IMPACT from ENVIRONMENT SOCIAL FACTORS NEW DIAGNOSES 2 visits Counseltopics Evaluation 2 ARV proposals • Sec.Prevention: Safe sex,… Lifestyle:Diet, work, co-medication… •HIV basics Potential Adherence and Therapy barriers •AIDS vs. HIV •Disclosure •CD4 & VL-interpretation before and during therapy •Life expectansy Social status check cf. social nurses! Drug specific Side effects: short & longterm • Initiate Dummy Run • ARV support : community (sensoa) • Adherence: timing, dosing, food, anticipation • Adherence vs. Resistance Initiation Haart and follow- up READINESS COMMITMENT Counseltopics Counseltopics •Drugplanning: optimizing drugintake, identify ARVreminders, ARV-storage, food recommendations…. •Telephone call patient / counselor •Patient rehearses drugplanning and potential SE = Timing , dosing, diet,anticipation, ARV_storage. •Drug specific SEffects •Reasons for non-adherence • Supportive Tools •Anticipate SEffects cf Dr. •Adherence check: Pillbox and reminder system UZ Leuven Vibrating alarms, watches, cell-phone alarm, SMS ADHERENCE COUNSELING MULTIDISCIPLINARY TEAM EFFORT INFORMATION EDUCATION NEGOTIATION BEFORE, DURING and AFTER START of ART