Journal of the International AIDS Society (Dec 2024)

Retention on antiretroviral therapy and drivers of lost‐to‐follow up in the Central African Republic: a longitudinal analysis

  • Gaspard Tekpa,
  • Jules Inikoutiyo,
  • Christian Yonli,
  • Celia Noguera,
  • Pierre Prince Lujwiro,
  • Laure Gigout,
  • Aboubacar Hachimou,
  • Sydney Romaric,
  • Raphaël Mabaïlao,
  • Marie Charlotte Banthas,
  • Larissa Bertille Mbia,
  • Paulette Rose Mbay,
  • Kevin Romuald,
  • Alain Sana,
  • Florida Roberte,
  • Laura Moretó‐Planas,
  • Eric Goemaere,
  • Calorine Mekiedje,
  • Stella Ouanekpone,
  • Maria Amparo Núñez‐Andrés,
  • Sarah Hoibak,
  • Xavier Vallès

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jia2.26387
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 12
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction The retention in care of patients undergoing antiretroviral therapy (ART) is a cornerstone for preventing AIDS‐associated morbidity and mortality, as well as further transmission of HIV. Adherence to ART poses particular challenges in conflict‐affected settings like the Central African Republic (CAR). The study objective was to estimate the rate of lost‐to‐follow‐up (LTFU) and determine factors associated with LTFU among patients living with HIV under ART in CAR. Methods A retrospective cohort analysis was conducted using data from patients being managed at 42 representative ART dispensing sites (i.e. management of ≥200 patients) in the seven health regions of CAR which started ART between January 2019 to September 2021 and followed up to December 2021. The outcome of LTFU was defined as a failure of a patient to attend a scheduled ART refill appointment for at least 90 days from the last appointment. Patients were censored at the first LTFU event. Results A total of 6844 patients enrolled in ART care were included in the analysis, of whom 67.5% were females. The mean age (standard deviation) was 35.3 years (10.5). Forty‐two per cent (n = 2874/6844) had an LTFU event during the follow‐up period. However, 23.2% (n = 666/2874) returned to care after LTFU. Overall retention in antiretroviral care at 12 months was 64.2% (CI 63.0−65.5), which ranged from 76.1% in the capital to 48.2% in the inner country region. Risk factors related to LTFU were being male (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 1.33; CI 1.1−1.5), age < 25 (aHR 1.46; CI 1.1−1.9), living in regions outside the capital (aHR 1.83; CI 1.6−2.3) and undernutrition (aHR 1.13; CI 1.0−1.3). Conclusions Retention to care in CAR is suboptimal, especially in the inner country. Our results underline the difficulties involved in retaining patients in ART in complex settings, the interplay between poor retention, social unrest, stigma, food insecurity and HIV epidemic control, and the need for tailored programming and interventions like differentiated treatment strategies and complementary food provision.

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