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Browsing by Author "Hargreaves JR"

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    Identifying care gaps along the HIV treatment failure cascade: A multistate analysis of viral load monitoring, re-suppression, and regimen switches in Zambia.
    (2025-Sep) Sikombe K; Le Tourneau N; Rice B; Pry JM; Simbeza S; Beres LK; Sharma A; Mukamba N; Wringe A; Hargreaves JR; Mutale J; Moore CB; Sikazwe I; Geng E; Mody A
    BACKGROUND: Timely response to treatment failure is critical for improved outcomes and viral re-suppression among people living with HIV, but care gaps along the treatment failure cascade can occur due to delays by both clients (e.g., retention and adherence) and health systems (e.g., fidelity to viral load [VL] monitoring guidelines). We used multistate analysis to identify drivers of implementation gaps in the treatment failure cascade, including time to HIV VL monitoring, re-suppression, and regimen switches, in Zambia. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We used national electronic HIV health records to identify adults on antiretroviral therapy (ART) for more than 6 months who experienced treatment failure (VL ≥ 1,000 copies/ml) at 24 clinics in Lusaka, Zambia, between August 2019 and November 2021. Using multistate analyses, we examined how care evolved after treatment failure, accounting for transitions across the treatment failure cascade over time, such as return visits, repeat VL testing, treatment interruptions (>60 days late for visit), and viral re-suppression. Analyses were stratified by ART regimen at cohort entry: tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/lamivudine or emtricitabine/dolutegravir TDF/XTC/DTG (TLD) and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/lamivudine or emtricitabine/efavirenz TDF/XTC/EFV (TLE). We repeated analyses to assess switch to second-line therapy among those with consecutively unsuppressed VL test results who were due for regimen switch. Among 179,855 individuals on ART (143,857 with documented VL), 7,916 (4.4%) had a documented elevated VL and drug regimen at the time of treatment failure (52.3% female, median age was 36.7 years (IQR 29.9-43.6), median time on ART 3.3 years (IQR 1.7-6.6), 54.6% on TLD and 45.4% on TLE). Among those with treatment failure, 72.2% (CI 71.3, 73.0%) had returned to clinic 6 months after initial elevated VL was drawn. After one year, 70.1% (CI 69.3, 70.9%) had a repeat VL, 16.6% (CI 15.9, 17.2%) experienced treatment interruption, and 11.4% (CI 10.3, 12.4%) returned to care without repeat VL testing. Among those with a repeat VL, 85.0% (CI 83.9, 86.1%) on TLD and 58.2% (CI 56.8, 59.8%) on TLE had resuppressed. Among those due for second-line switch, 27.9% (CI 24.1, 31.5%) on TLD and 66.6% (CI 64.5, 68.9%) on TLE had changed regimens after one year while 52.4% on TLD had a third VL repeated prior to switch (CI 47.2, 57.4%) (68.0% CI 61.6, 75.2% suppressed of those with repeated VL) compared to 32.1% (CI 29.9, 34.1%) (40.7% CI 36.1, 45.4% suppressed) on TLE. This study was limited by the inability to capture all aspects of care delivery related to treatment failure, such as outreach, enhanced adherence counseling confirmation, and provider rationale for delayed VL rechecking. CONCLUSION: After treatment failure, we identified substantial delays in returning for adherence counseling, treatment interruptions, and missed opportunities in rechecking VL status or switching to second-line therapy in routine care in Zambia. Among those who did have VL tests rechecked, re-suppression rates were significantly higher among individuals on TLD compared to TLE. To optimize response and outcomes after treatment failure, strategies must prioritize and target both client and health systems behaviors to meet the care needs in the modern era of TLD.
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    Programme science methodologies and practices that address "FURRIE" challenges: examples from the field.
    (2024-Jul) Hargreaves JR; Baptiste S; Bhattacharjee P; Cowan FM; Herce ME; Lauer K; Sikazwe I; Geng E
    INTRODUCTION: "Programme science" deploys scientific methods to address questions that are a priority to support the impact of public health programmes. As such, programme science responds to the challenges of making such studies: (1) feasible to undertake, (2) useful, (3) rigorous, (4) real-world-relevant, (5) informative, and undertaken by (6) equitable partnerships. The acronym "FURRIE" is proposed to describe this set of six challenges. This paper discusses selected HIV/STI (sexually transmitted infection) programme science case studies to illustrate how programme science rises to the FURRIE challenges. DISCUSSION: One way in which programme science is made more feasible is through the analysis and interpretation of data collected through service delivery. For some questions, these data can be augmented through methods that reach potential clients of services who have not accessed services or been lost to follow-up. Process evaluation can enhance the usefulness of programme science by studying implementation processes, programme-client interactions and contextual factors. Ensuring rigour by limiting bias and confounding in the real-world context of programme science studies requires methodological innovation. Striving for scientific rigour can also have the unintended consequence of creating a gap between what happens in a study, and what happens in the "real-world." Community-led monitoring is one approach to grounding data collection in the real-world experience of clients. Evaluating complex, context-specific strategies to strengthen health outcomes in a way that is informative for other settings requires clear specification of the intervention packages that are planned and delivered in practice. Programme science provides a model for equitable partnership through co-leadership between programmes, researchers and the communities they serve. CONCLUSIONS: Programme science addresses the FURRIE challenges, thereby improving programme impact and ultimately health outcomes and health equity. The adoption and adaptation of the types of novel programme science approaches showcased here should be promoted within and beyond the HIV/STI field.

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