U.S. patient preferences for long‐acting HIV treatment: a discrete choice experiment

Author:

Graham Susan M.123ORCID,Barthold Douglas4,Hauber Brett45,Brah Aaron T.1,Saldarriaga Enrique4,Collier Ann C.1,Ho Rodney J. Y.6,Marconi Vincent C.78ORCID,Simoni Jane M.29,

Affiliation:

1. Division of Allergy & Infectious Diseases Department of Medicine University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

2. Department of Global Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

3. Department of Epidemiology University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

4. The Comparative Health Outcomes, Policy, and Economics (CHOICE) Institute University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

5. Pfizer, Inc New York New York USA

6. Department of Pharmaceutics and Bioengineering University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

7. Division of Infectious Diseases Department of Medicine Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

8. Department of Global Health Rollins School of Public Health Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA

9. Department of Psychology University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionRecent advances in long‐acting antiretroviral therapy (LA‐ART) could provide new options for HIV treatment and reduce adherence barriers, if regimens are acceptable to patients. We elicited preferences for key attributes of potential LA‐ART regimens among people with HIV (PWH) in the United States, focusing on four treatment modes (oral tablets, subcutaneous injections, intramuscular injections, and implants), product characteristics and location of administration.MethodsA discrete choice experiment was conducted among PWH aged ≥18 years recruited from HIV clinics in Washington State and Atlanta, Georgia from March 2021 to June 2022. Participants responded to 17 choice scenarios, each with three options: two systematically generated hypothetical LA‐ART regimens and a constant opt‐out (their current daily oral treatment). LA‐ART regimen descriptions included treatment mode, pain, dosing frequency, location, pre‐treatment time with undetectable viral load, pre‐treatment negative reaction testing and “late‐dose leeway” (i.e. flexibility or forgiveness in timing the next dose). We used conditional logistic regression, with an interaction between treatment mode and pain, to estimate preference weights for all attribute levels.ResultsSeven hundred participants (350 at each site) enrolled, with median age 51 years (range 18–73); 70% identified as cisgender male, 24% as cisgender female and 6% as non‐binary or transgender. LA oral tablets were the only mode preferred over current daily oral treatment, with annual implants and injections the next most preferred LA‐ART option. Longer time between doses was preferred, and administration at home was preferred to clinics, which were preferred to pharmacies. Attributes with less impact on preferences included oral lead‐in treatment to achieve viral suppression or test for negative reactions and late‐dose leeway around the prescribed dosing interval. Participants in Atlanta were more likely to prefer their current daily oral ART than participants from Seattle.ConclusionsPWH in the United States may soon have several options for LA‐ART. Our results suggest that LA oral tablets will be preferred by many patients over their current daily oral treatment, while implants and injections with longer duration may be acceptable to some. Future research should investigate sources of preference heterogeneity and actual uptake of and adherence to LA‐ART products, when available.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference40 articles.

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