Competing risk of mortality on loss to follow-up outcome among patients with HIV on ART: a retrospective cohort study from the Zimbabwe national ART programme

Author:

Matsena Zingoni ZvifadzoORCID,Chirwa TobiasORCID,Todd JimORCID,Musenge EustasiusORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the loss to follow-up (LTFU) rates at different healthcare levels after antiretroviral therapy (ART) services decentralisation among ART patients who initiated ART between 2004 and 2017 using the competing risk model in addition to the Kaplan-Meier and Cox regressions analysis.DesignA retrospective cohort study.SettingThe study was done in Zimbabwe using a nationwide routinely collected HIV patient-level data from various health levels of care facilities compiled through the electronic patient management system (ePMS).ParticipantsWe analysed 390 771 participants aged 15 years and above from 538 health facilities.OutcomesThe primary endpoint was LTFU defined as a failure of a patient to report for drug refill for at least 90 days from last appointment date or if the patient missed the next scheduled visit date and never showed up again. Mortality was considered a secondary outcome if a patient was reported to have died.ResultsThe total exposure time contributed was 1 544 468 person-years. LTFU rate was 5.75 (95% CI 5.71 to 5.78) per 100 person-years. Adjustment for the competing event independently increased LTFU rate ratio in provincial and referral (adjusted sub-HRs (AsHR) 1.22; 95% CI 1.18 to 1.26) and district and mission (AsHR 1.47; 95% CI 1.45 to 1.50) hospitals (reference: primary healthcare); in urban sites (AsHR 1.61; 95% CI 1.59 to 1.63) (reference: rural); and among adolescence and young adults (15–24 years) group (AsHR 1.19; 95% CI 1.16 to 1.21) (reference: 35–44 years). We also detected overwhelming association between LTFU and tuberculosis-infected patients (AsHR 1.53; 95% CI 1.45 to 1.62) (reference: no tuberculosis).ConclusionsWe have observed considerable findings that ‘leakages’ (LTFU) within the ART treatment cascade persist even after the decentralisation of health services. Risk factors for LTFU reflect those found in sub-Saharan African studies. Interventions that retain patients in care by minimising any ‘leakages’ along the treatment cascade are essential in attaining the 90–90–90 UNAIDS fast-track targets.

Funder

Sub-Saharan Africa Consortium for Advanced Biostatistics

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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