One Pill, Once a Day: Simplified Treatment Regimens and Retention in HIV Care

Author:

Bor Jacob,Kluberg Sheryl A,LaValley Michael P,Evans Denise,Hirasen Kamban,Maskew Mhairi,Long Lawrence,Fox Matthew P

Abstract

Abstract Simplified drug regimens may improve retention in care for persons with chronic diseases. In April 2013, South Africa adopted a once-daily single-pill human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) treatment regimen as the standard of care, replacing a multiple-pill regimen. Because the regimens had similar biological efficacy, the shift to single-pill therapy offered a real-world test of the impact of simplified drug-delivery mechanisms on patient behavior. Using a quasi-experimental regression discontinuity design, we assessed retention in care among patients starting HIV treatment just before and just after the guideline change. The study included 4,484 patients starting treatment at a large public sector clinic in Johannesburg, South Africa. The share of patients prescribed a single-pill regimen increased by over 40 percentage points between March and April 2013. Initiating treatment after the policy change was associated with 11.7–percentage-points’ higher retention at 12 months (95% confidence interval: −2.2, 29.4). Findings were robust to different measures of retention, different bandwidths, and different statistical models. Patients starting treatment early in HIV infection—a key population in the test-and-treat era—experienced the greatest improvements in retention from single-pill regimens.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Epidemiology

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