Point-of-care CD4+ technology implementation in Free State, South Africa, was associated with improved patient health outcomes.

IF 1.2
L Van Turha, K Maharaj, A Rose, C Boeke, T F Peter, L Vojnov, J Quevedo, Y Tsibolane
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

BACKGROUND Point-of-care (POC) CD4+ technologies have the potential to increase patient access to treatment and care through rapid testing and result delivery at or close to where patients seek care. South African (SA) guidelines suggest the use of CD4+ testing to prioritise patients most in need of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and to support identification of patients with advanced HIV disease and opportunistic management of patients on ART. Understanding the patient impact of implementing POC CD4+ testing in the intended setting and operated by lower cadres of healthcare worker or non-professional healthcare facility staff will provide valuable insight into the appropriate use and placement of POC CD4+ technologies throughout SA. OBJECTIVES To determine the patient impact (turnaround time of tests, loss to follow-up, and proportions of eligible patients proceeding to the next steps in the testing and treatment cascade) of implementing POC CD4+ testing technologies compared with conventional laboratory-based CD4+ testing. METHODS This retrospective cohort study included all HIV-positive adults from 30 healthcare facilities in Free State Province, SA. Healthcare facilities were placed into two groups (POC and laboratory referral) using a stratified randomisation technique based on the presence of a POC CD4+ technology and minimal ART volumes. Patients who received a CD4+ test prior to ART initiation between September 2012 and September 2014 were included. Data were collected from patient charts and the POC devices. RESULTS For new patients, the average time from HIV diagnosis and CD4+ testing was reduced from 7.6 days in the laboratory referral group to 4.5 days in the POC group, a decrease of almost 60%. Additionally, 59.6% of patients in the POC group received their HIV diagnosis and CD4+ test result on the same day, compared with 37.5% in the laboratory referral group (risk ratio (RR) 1.49; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.01 - 2.18). Fewer patients were lost between HIV diagnosis and CD4+ testing (2.7% v. 8.6%) (RR 0.02; 95% CI 0.05 - 0.78) in the POC group. The average test error rate across the study time period was 8.4%; however, the error rate remained <5% for the final 5 months of the study. CONCLUSIONS Introduction of the Alere Pima POC CD4+ technology in the Free State, operated by nurses and lay counsellors, was associated with positive patient outcomes across all parameters analysed. While this study highlighted an effective conventional laboratory network, a full costing and affordability analysis coupled with patient impact and access data from this study will provide further insight into the potential deployment strategies of POC CD4+ technologies in SA.
在南非自由邦实施的医疗点CD4+技术与患者健康结果的改善有关。
背景:医护点(POC) CD4+技术有可能通过快速检测和在患者求诊地点或其附近提供结果,增加患者获得治疗和护理的机会。南非指南建议使用CD4+检测来优先考虑最需要抗逆转录病毒治疗的患者,并支持识别晚期艾滋病毒患者和对接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的患者进行机会性管理。了解在预期环境中实施POC CD4+检测并由较低级别医护人员或非专业医疗机构工作人员操作对患者的影响,将为在整个SA中适当使用和放置POC CD4+技术提供有价值的见解。目的:确定实施POC CD4+检测技术与传统的基于实验室的CD4+检测相比对患者的影响(检测的周转期、随访损失以及进入检测和治疗级联下一步的合格患者比例)。方法:这项回顾性队列研究包括来自南非自由州省30家医疗机构的所有艾滋病毒阳性成年人。采用分层随机化技术将医疗机构分为两组(POC和实验室转诊),该技术基于POC CD4+技术的存在和最小ART量。在2012年9月至2014年9月期间接受抗逆转录病毒治疗前接受CD4+检测的患者被纳入研究。数据收集自患者病历和POC设备。结果:对于新患者,从HIV诊断和CD4+检测的平均时间从实验室转诊组的7.6天减少到POC组的4.5天,减少了近60%。此外,59.6%的POC组患者在同一天获得HIV诊断和CD4+检测结果,而实验室转诊组为37.5%(风险比(RR) 1.49;95%置信区间(CI) 1.01 - 2.18)。HIV诊断和CD4+检测之间的患者损失较少(2.7% vs . 8.6%) (RR 0.02;95% CI 0.05 - 0.78)。整个研究期间的平均测试错误率为8.4%;然而,在研究的最后5个月,错误率保持在5%。结论:在自由邦引入由护士和非专业咨询师操作的Alere Pima POC CD4+技术与所有分析参数的阳性患者预后相关。虽然这项研究强调了一个有效的传统实验室网络,但全面的成本和可负担性分析,加上患者影响和获取数据,将进一步深入了解POC CD4+技术在南非的潜在部署策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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