Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases (May 2015)

Relationship between viral load and behavioral measures of adherence to antiretroviral therapy in children living with human immunodeficiency virus in Latin America

  • Horacio A. Duarte,
  • Donald Robert Harris,
  • Katherine Tassiopoulos,
  • Erin Leister,
  • Silvia Fabiana Biason de Moura Negrini,
  • Flávia Faleiro Ferreira,
  • Maria Letícia Santos Cruz,
  • Jorge Pinto,
  • Susannah Allison,
  • Rohan Hazra

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 3
pp. 263 – 271

Abstract

Read online

Few studies have examined antiretroviral therapy adherence in Latin American children. Standardized behavioral measures were applied to a large cohort of human immunodeficiency virus-infected children in Brazil, Mexico, and Peru to assess adherence to prescribed antiretroviral therapy doses during the three days prior to study visits, assess timing of last missed dose, and evaluate the ability of the adherence measures to predict viral suppression. Time trends in adherence were modeled using a generalized estimating equations approach to account for possible correlations in outcomes measured repeatedly in the same participants. Associations of adherence with human immunodeficiency virus viral load were examined using linear regression. Mean enrollment age of the 380 participants was 5 years; 57.6% had undetectable’ viral load ( 0.3). Last time missed any antiretroviral therapy dose was reported as “never” for 52.0% at enrollment, increasing to 60.7% and 65.9% at the 6- and 12-month visits, respectively (p < 0.001 for test of trend). The proportion with undetectable viral load was higher among those who never missed a dose at enrollment and the 12-month visit (p ≤ 0.005), but not at the 6-month visit (p = 0.2). While antiretroviral therapy adherence measures utilized in this study showed some association with viral load for these Latin American children, they may not be adequate for reliably identifying non-adherence and consequently children at risk for viral resistance. Other strategies are needed to improve the evaluation of adherence in this population. Keywords: Pediatric, ART, Adherence, Latin America