HIV/AIDS: Research and Palliative Care (Jun 2022)
Time to Nutritional Recovery and Its Predictors Among Undernourished Adult Patients Living with Human Immune Deficiency Virus Attending Anti-Retroviral Therapy at Public Health Facilities in Southwest Ethiopia. A Multicenter Study
Abstract
Soresa Alemu, Sabit Zenu, Dereje Tsegaye Departments of Public Health, College of Health Science, Mettu University, Mettu, EthiopiaCorrespondence:, Soresa Alemu, Email [email protected]: Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus is one of the factors that contribute to malnutrition. Several initiatives have been launched in Ethiopia to improve HIV patients’ nutritional status and achieve early recovery when malnourished patients are found. Despite these efforts, adult HIV patients’ malnutrition recovery remains poor.Objective: The objective of this study was to assess the time to recovery from undernutrition and associated factors among adult HIV patients on ART at public health facilities in Ilu Aba Bor zone, Southwest Ethiopia, 2021.Methods: An institution-based retrospective cohort study of 374 adult HIV patients with undernutrition receiving ART at public health institutions in Southwest Ethiopia was conducted. Data were extracted from the patient’s record and entered into Epi-Data version 3.1 before being exported to STATA version 14. The Kaplan–Meier method was used to estimate the time to recovery, and the difference in survival time between predictor variables was tested using the Log rank test. Weibull regression models, both bivariable and multivariable, were fitted. A p-value of 0.05 was declared statistically significant.Results: The recovery rate was 67.7% and the median recovery time was 65 days (95% CI = 61.6– 68.4) and 145 days (95% CI = 130.7– 159) for MAM and SAM, respectively. Marital status (Married) (AHR = 0.61; CI = (0.43,0.86)), ART status (pre ART) AHR = 0.492; CI = (0.305,0.793), CD4 (200-350c/m3, AHR = 2.116;CI = (1.447,3.21), type of malnutrition (AHR = 0.22; CI= (0.156,0.307)), ART adherence level (AHR = 3.33, CI = (1.997,5.56)) WHO clinical staging (AHR = 0.685, CI = (0.485,0.948)), sex (male), (AHR = 0.678; CI = (0.509,0.901)) and age (35– 54), (AHR = 1.86; CI = (1.408,2.47)) were predictors of recovery time.Conclusion: Compared to previous studies, the recovery rate was high. SAM, advanced clinical stage, sex, and marital status were all negatively associated with nutritional recovery time, whereas ART adherence, CD4 count, and age were predictors. As a result, a therapeutic feeding program should focus on factors that slow recovery time.Keywords: time to nutritional recovery, malnutrition, adult HIV patients, Weibull regression model