Attrition and related trends in scientific rigor: A score card for ART adherence intervention research and recommendations for future directions

被引:13
作者
Amico K.R. [1 ]
Harman J.J. [1 ]
O'Grady M.A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Center for Health, Intervention, and Prevention (CHIP), University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Attrition Rate; Acquir Immune; Adherence Behavior; Amico; Retention Strategy;
D O I
10.1007/s11904-008-0026-0
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Scientific rigor in intervention trials is frequently used in systems that identify effective interventions for dissemination. In these systems, and in work that synthesizes bodies of research, percent attrition is often considered a fatal threat to validity. However, differential attrition, versus percent total, is of primary concern. Key methodologic, design, and analytic issues pertaining to scientific rigor in longitudinal designs were identified, and the current literature on antiretroviral therapy adherence interventions (k = 51) was evaluated in relation to these. Although results suggest that this body of literature has progressed in rigor, improvements are needed in transparency of reporting participant flow, retention strategies, handling of missing data, and characterization of retained and lost cohorts. Attrition averaged 30% total, and differential by study arm was estimated at 9%. Differential attrition continues to be underreported and is not well represented by the more frequently used, though arguably less appropriate, metric of overall percent attrition. Copyright © 2008 by Current Medicine Group LLC.
引用
收藏
页码:172 / 185
页数:13
相关论文
共 88 条
[61]  
McPherson-Baker S., Malow R., Penedo F., Et al., Enhancing adherence to combination antiretroviral therapy in non-adherent HIV-positive men, AIDS Care, 12, pp. 399-404, (2000)
[62]  
Milam J., Richardson J.L., McCutchan A., Et al., Effect of a brief antiretroviral adherence intervention delivered by HIV care providers, J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr, 40, pp. 356-363, (2005)
[63]  
Molassiotis A., Lopez-Nahas V., Chung W., Lam S., A pilot study of the effects of a behavioural intervention on treatment adherence in HIV-infected patients, AIDS Care, 15, pp. 125-135, (2003)
[64]  
Murphy D., Lu M., Martin D., Et al., Results of a pilot intervention trial to improve antiretroviral adherence among HIV-positive patients, J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care, 13, pp. 57-69, (2002)
[65]  
Murphy D.A., Marelich W.D., Rappaport N.B., Et al., Results of an antiretroviral adherence intervention: STAR (Staying Healthy: Taking Antiretrovirals Regularly), J Int Assoc Physicians AIDS Care (Chic Ill), 6, pp. 113-124, (2007)
[66]  
Parsons J., Rosof E., Punzalan J., Di Maria L., Integration of motivational interviewing and cognitive behavioral therapy to improve HIV medication adherence and reduce substance use among HIV-positive men and women: Results of a pilot project, AIDS Patient Care STDS, 19, pp. 31-39, (2005)
[67]  
Pearson C.R., Micek M.A., Simoni J.M., Et al., Randomized control trial of peer-delivered, modified directly observed therapy for HAART in Mozambique, J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr, 46, pp. 238-244, (2007)
[68]  
Rathbun R.C., Farmer K.C., Stephens J.R., Lockhart S.M., Impact of an adherence clinic on behavioral outcomes and virologic response in treatment of HIV infection: A prospective, randomized, controlled pilot study, Clin Ther, 27, pp. 199-209, (2005)
[69]  
Rawlings M.K., Thompson M.A., Farthing C.F., Et al., NZTA4006 Helping to Enhance Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy (HEART) Study Team: Impact of an educational program on efficacy and adherence with a twice-daily lamivudine/zidovudine/abacavir regimen in underrepresented HIV-infected patients, J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr, 34, pp. 174-183, (2003)
[70]  
Remien R., Stirratt M., Dolezal C., Et al., Couple-focused support to improve HIV medication adherence: A randomized controlled trial, AIDS, 19, pp. 807-814, (2005)