Abstract

Introduction

Global HIV‐1 prevalence is 35.3 million [1]; women comprise >50% of those infected. The majority of women may lack regular care and only one‐fourth are virologically suppressed [2]. ELLA is a cross‐sectional, non‐interventional study conducted across Europe, Latin America, Canada and Asia that describes barriers to care for HIV‐infected women and associations with disease stage, symptoms and health‐related quality of life (HRQoL).

Methods

HIV‐infected women eligible for ELLA (≥18 years) completed: Barrier to Care Scale (BACS) comprising 12 items in four domains (Index range 0–12, Overall range 1–4, greater=more barriers, Overall score ≥2 considered severe); AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) Health Status Assessment comprising 21 items assessing 9 HRQoL domains (range 0–100, greater=better); and ACTG Symptom Distress Module comprising 20 symptoms rated on bother (range 0–4, greater=more bother). Healthcare providers documented medical history and HIV clinical data. Correlations of BACS response and last reported VL/CD4 count with HIV symptoms and HRQoL were analyzed. Spearman rank order was used to test correlations with statistical significance set at p<0.05.

Results

Enrollment: 1931 women from 30 countries; mean age 40 years (16.9% >50 years); 47.7% education <12 years; 36% unemployed; 82.9% urban residence. HIV was acquired heterosexually in 83.0%; 88.2% of subjects were on ART; 57.5% had VL<50 c/ml; mean CD4 was 540.5 c/µL. Mean [SD] BACS Index and Overall scores were 6.19 [3.47] (N=1818) and 2.09 [0.71] (N=1922), respectively. Stigma was a prominent barrier. Lower (better) BACS Index and Overall scores correlated with better HRQoL on all nine domains (p<0.0001). Lower VL and greater CD4 count were both correlated with better HRQoL for eight of nine domains (p<0.04, p≤0.0002, respectively) excepting pain. Lower BACS Index and Overall scores correlated with fewer symptom count and less symptom bother (p<0.0001). Fewer symptom count and less symptom bother correlated with better HRQoL on all nine domains (p<0.0001). While greater CD4 count correlated with fewer HIV symptoms and less bother (p<0.0001), VL did not significantly correlate with either.

Conclusions

In HIV‐infected women, reduced barriers to care correlated with fewer symptoms, less symptom bother and better HRQoL. Improved HRQoL may be mediated by greater CD4 counts and fewer symptoms. Better access to care may improve HRQoL outcomes in this population.

Details

Title
Reduced HIV symptoms and improved health‐related quality of life correlate with better access to care for HIV‐1 infected women: the ELLA study
Author
Baran, Robert 1 ; Mulcahy, Fiona 2 ; Krznaric, Ivanka 3 ; Antonella d'Arminio Monforte 4 ; Samarina, Anna 5 ; He, Xi 6 ; Cassetti, Isabel 7 ; Jose Valdez Madruga 8 ; Zachry, Woodie 9 ; Jean van Wyk 9 ; Martinez, Marisol 9 

 Global Health Economics Outcomes Research, AbbVie, North Chicago, IL, USA 
 Infectious Diseases, St James Hospital, Dublin, Ireland 
 Infectious Disease Department, Medical Center for Infectious Diseases Berlin (MIB), Berlin, Germany 
 Clinic of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, San Paolo Hospital, University of Milan, Milan, Italy 
 Infectious Disease Department, Saint‐Petersburg HIV Centre, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation 
 Infectious Disease Department, Guangzhou 8th People's Hospital, Guangzhou, China 
 Infectious Diseases, Helios Salud, Buenos Aires, Argentina 
 DST/AIDS, Centro de Referência e Treinamento, São Paulo, Brazil 
 Medical Affairs, AbbVie, North Chicago, IL, USA 
Section
Poster Session – Abstract P084
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Nov 2014
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
e-ISSN
1758-2652
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2289749086
Copyright
© 2014. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.