Patient and Physician Preferences for Regimen Attributes for the Treatment of HIV in the United States and Canada
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Study Population
2.3. Satisfaction and Stigma Questions
2.4. Discrete Choice Experiment
2.5. Demographics and Treatment Characteristics
2.6. Pilot Testing
2.7. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. PLWH Characteristics
3.2. Physician Characteristics
3.3. Current Treatment Satisfaction, Adherence and Stigma
3.4. Preference Estimates
3.5. Predicted Switching Probabilities
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Attributes | Attribute Description | Attribute Levels (Variable Name) |
---|---|---|
Dosing frequency | PLWH: How often you would receive the HIV treatment. For LAI, you would receive two injections each time at your HIV doctor’s clinic. Physicians: How often your PLWH would receive the HIV treatment. For LAI, two injections are given each time at your HIV clinic. | Oral: One pill, every day |
LAI:
| ||
Risk of side effects | How many PLWH on a treatment develop mild to moderate bothersome side effects. | Oral and LAI:
|
Forgivability | PLWH: The length of time that you have to take a missed dose without risking loss of viral suppression. You resume the normal dosing frequency after taking this catch-up dose. Physicians: the length of time PLWH have to take a missed dose without risking loss of viral suppression. PLWH resume the normal dosing frequency after taking this catch-up dose. | Oral:
|
LAI:
| ||
Food and mealtime restrictions | PLWH: How much you are restricted in what and when you eat. Physicians: How much PLWH are restricted in what and when they eat. | Oral:
|
LAI: None |
Challenge (Variable Name) | PLWH | Physician |
---|---|---|
Lifestyle (Reference) | You find that your current treatment increasingly interferes with your lifestyle. While the treatment is becoming an inconvenience, you generally manage to follow your treatment dosing schedule. | The treatment increasingly interferes with the PLWH’s busy lifestyle. However, the PLWH manages to adhere to your treatment advice. |
Lifestyle and adherence (Adhere) | You notice that you are increasingly missing a treatment dose. You are concerned that the treatment does not fit very well into your lifestyle. | You notice that the PLWH increasingly misses a treatment dose. You are concerned that the treatment does not fit very well into your PLWH’s lifestyle. |
Worry/Fatigue (Worry) | You worry about the need to take your HIV medicine daily and you are increasingly tired of having to take the medicine. Every time you take your HIV medicine it is a reminder of your HIV. Your treatment feels like a burden to you. | You notice that the daily need to take the medicine worries your PLWH and causes anxiety. You are concerned about how the PLWH will manage the treatment in the long term. |
Side effects (Side_effect) | You are struggling with the side effects of your medication. The side effects are becoming increasingly burdensome and you wonder how you will be able to manage them in the future. | The PLWH struggles with the management of side effects. You are concerned about how the PLWH will manage the side effects in the future. |
Disclosure (Disclosue) | You constantly worry that a friend, family member, or co-worker might discover your HIV medicine. Not many people know you have HIV and you carefully hide your pills. | The PLWH seems to constantly worry that friends, family members, or others discover the medicine. Not many people know the PLWH has HIV, and the PLWH is hiding the pills carefully. |
No challenge (Excluded for for physicians) | You are generally satisfied with your current treatment. However, you may be curious to learn about new HIV treatments. | Not applicable in physician DCE |
Overall (N = 553) | US (n = 453) | Canada (n = 100) | |
---|---|---|---|
Gender, n (%) | |||
Female | 183 (33.1) | 146 (32.2) | 37 (37.0) |
Male | 365 (66.0) | 304 (67.1) | 61 (61.0) |
Transgender | 5 (0.9) | 3 (0.7) | 2 (2.0) |
Age, years | |||
Mean (SD) | 39.3 (12.2) | 39.5 (12.3) | 38.4 (11.5) |
Age group, n (%) | |||
>55 years old | 82 (14.9) | 72 (15.9) | 10 (10.0) |
Race a, n (%) | |||
White/Caucasian | 311 (56.2) | 250 (55.2) | 61 (61.0) |
Black/African American | 105 (19.0) | 96 (21.2) | 9 (9.0) |
Hispanic/Latino | 51 (9.2) | 51 (11.3) | N/A |
Asian | 31 (5.6) | 16 (3.5) | 15 (15.0) |
Other/Mixed race | 54 (9.7) | 40 (8.8) | 14 (14.0) |
Ethnicity, n (%) | |||
Hispanic/Latino | 77 (13.9) | 77 (17.0) | N/A |
Not Hispanic/Latino | 475 (85.9) | 376 (83.0) | N/A |
Sexual orientation, n (%) | |||
Straight | 344 (62.2) | 282 (62.3) | 62 (62.0) |
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ) | 159 (28.8) | 132 (29.1) | 27 (27.0) |
Men who have sex with men | 46 (8.3) | 35 (7.7) | 11 (11.0) |
Other | 2 (0.4) | 2 (0.4) | 0 |
Prefer not to say | 2 (0.4) | 2 (0.4) | 0 |
Income (USD), n (%) | |||
Less than USD 25,000 | 111 (20.1) | 99 (21.9) | 12 (12.0) |
USD 25,000 to USD 49,999 | 82 (14.8) | 67 (14.8) | 15 (15.0) |
USD 50,000 to USD 74,999 | 94 (17.0) | 74 (16.3) | 20 (20.0) |
USD 75,000 to USD 99,999 | 97 (17.5) | 86 (19.0) | 11 (11.0) |
USD 100,000 to USD 149,999 | 109 (19.7) | 79 (17.4) | 30 (30.0) |
USD 150,000 or more | 53 (9.6) | 42 (9.3) | 11 (11.0) |
Prefer not to answer | 7 (1.3) | 6 (1.3) | 1 (1.0) |
Time since diagnosis (group), n (%) | |||
<1 year | 14 (2.5) | 13 (2.9) | 1 (1.0) |
1–2 years | 103 (18.6) | 84 (18.5) | 19 (19.0) |
2–5 years | 142 (25.7) | 109 (24.1) | 33 (33.0) |
5–10 years | 118 (21.3) | 98 (21.6) | 20 (20.0) |
>10 years | 176 (31.8) | 149 (32.9) | 27 (27.0) |
Time since diagnosis, years | |||
Mean (SD) | 9.4 (8.8) | 9.7 (9.0) | 8.3 (8.2) |
Time since initiating therapy, n (%) | |||
≤1 year ago | 102 (18.4) | 76 (16.8) | 26 (26.0) |
1 year to 3 years ago | 152 (27.5) | 123 (27.2) | 29 (29.0) |
3–5 years ago | 78 (14.1) | 64 (14.1) | 14 (14.0) |
5–10 years ago | 96 (17.4) | 86 (19.0) | 10 (10.0) |
10 years ago or longer | 120 (21.7) | 102 (22.5) | 18 (18.0) |
I do not remember | 5 (0.9) | 2 (0.4) | 3 (3.0) |
Overall (N = 456) | US (n = 305) | Canada (n = 151) | |
---|---|---|---|
Time practicing medicine, years | |||
Mean (SD) | 16.1 (8.4) | 16.8 (8.4) | 14.5 (8.1) |
Median | 15.0 | 16.0 | 13.0 |
Min–max | 2.0–39.0 | 2.0–37.0 | 2.0–39.0 |
Time treating HIV | |||
Mean (SD) | 13.2 (8.1) | 14.6 (8.2) | 10.5 (6.9) |
Median | 12.0 | 13.0 | 9.0 |
Min–max | 2.0–34.0 | 2.0–34.0 | 2.0–30.0 |
% clinical time dedicated to HIV care | |||
Mean (SD) | 35.7 (30.1) | 37.8 (31.0) | 31.3 (27.7) |
Median | 25.0 | 30.0 | 20.0 |
Min–max | 1.0–100.0 | 1.0–100.0 | 1.0–90.0 |
Location, n (%) | |||
Rural/Countryside | 29 (6.4) | 22 (7.2) | 7 (4.6) |
Outskirts/Suburbs of a small city | 38 (8.3) | 27 (8.9) | 11 (7.3) |
Center or close to center of a small city | 96 (21.1) | 62 (20.3) | 34 (22.5) |
Outskirts/Suburbs of a large city | 93 (20.4) | 66 (21.6) | 27 (17.9) |
Center or close to center of a large city | 200 (43.9) | 128 (42) | 72 (47.7) |
Role, n (%) | |||
Infectious disease specialist | 136 (29.8) | 120 (39.3) | 16 (10.6) |
Internal medicine/primary care/general doctor/family practitioner | 250 (54.8) | 154 (50.5) | 96 (63.6) |
Physician assistant/nurse practitioner | 13 (2.9) | 5 (1.6) | 8 (5.3) |
HIV specialist | 50 (11) | 24 (7.9) | 26 (17.2) |
Immunologist | 1 (0.2) | 0 | 1 (0.7) |
Other | 6 (1.3) | 2 (0.7) | 4 (2.6) |
Clinic/Facility, n (%) | |||
Closed system/integrated network | 18 (3.9) | 14 (4.6) | 4 (2.6) |
Large group practice | 126 (27.6) | 82 (26.9) | 44 (29.1) |
Small group or individual practice | 145 (31.8) | 99 (32.5) | 46 (30.5) |
Community or regional hospital | 58 (12.7) | 31 (10.2) | 27 (17.9) |
Ryan White clinic | 19 (4.2) | 19 (6.2) | 0 |
Academic system or hospital | 90 (19.7) | 60 (19.7) | 30 (19.9) |
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Gelhorn, H.; Garris, C.; Arthurs, E.; Spinelli, F.; Cutts, K.; Chua, G.N.; Collacott, H.; Lebouché, B.; Lowman, E.; Rice, H.; et al. Patient and Physician Preferences for Regimen Attributes for the Treatment of HIV in the United States and Canada. J. Pers. Med. 2022, 12, 334. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12030334
Gelhorn H, Garris C, Arthurs E, Spinelli F, Cutts K, Chua GN, Collacott H, Lebouché B, Lowman E, Rice H, et al. Patient and Physician Preferences for Regimen Attributes for the Treatment of HIV in the United States and Canada. Journal of Personalized Medicine. 2022; 12(3):334. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12030334
Chicago/Turabian StyleGelhorn, Heather, Cindy Garris, Erin Arthurs, Frank Spinelli, Katelyn Cutts, Gin Nie Chua, Hannah Collacott, Bertrand Lebouché, Erik Lowman, Howard Rice, and et al. 2022. "Patient and Physician Preferences for Regimen Attributes for the Treatment of HIV in the United States and Canada" Journal of Personalized Medicine 12, no. 3: 334. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12030334
APA StyleGelhorn, H., Garris, C., Arthurs, E., Spinelli, F., Cutts, K., Chua, G. N., Collacott, H., Lebouché, B., Lowman, E., Rice, H., & Heidenreich, S. (2022). Patient and Physician Preferences for Regimen Attributes for the Treatment of HIV in the United States and Canada. Journal of Personalized Medicine, 12(3), 334. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12030334