PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Perception of antiretroviral generic medicines: one-day survey of HIV-infected patients and their physicians in France.

  • Christine Jacomet,
  • Clotilde Allavena,
  • Fleur Peyrol,
  • Bruno Pereira,
  • Laurence Morand Joubert,
  • Haleh Bagheri,
  • Laurent Cotte,
  • Rodolphe Garaffo,
  • Laurent Gerbaud,
  • Pierre Dellamonica

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117214
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. e0117214

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:In the interest of cost effectiveness, switching antiretroviral brand name medications to generics is recommended in France since 2013. The study objective was to evaluate the perception of generics per se and antiretroviral generics in HIV-infected patients and their hospital physicians. METHODS AND FINDINGS:556 out of 703 (79%) adult HIV+ outpatients and 116 physicians in 33 clinics were included in a multicentric cross-sectional survey performed in September 2013. Patients completed a self-questionnaire on their perception and acceptability of generics. Physicians completed a questionnaire on their acceptability of switching antiretroviral to generic. Socio-demographic data, medical history and HIV history were collected. Among the 556 patients with a median HIV duration of 13 years, 77% were France native, 59% in active employment, 100% covered by social insurance, 95% on antiretroviral therapy. Seventy-six percent of the patients accepted generics and 55% trusted them overall. Antiretroviral generics were accepted by 44% of them but only by 17% if the pill burden was going to increase. The factor significantly associated with acceptability of antiretroviral generics was acceptance of generics per se (p<0.001). Among the 116 physicians following a median of 100 HIV-patients/year, 75% would prescribe generics, dropping to 26% if the combo had to be broken. Factors significantly associated with willingness to prescribe antiretroviral generics were the absence of concern regarding the chemical entity (OR = 0.33), being aware that the patient would accept generics for other pathologies (OR = 2.04) and would accept antiretroviral generics (OR = 1.94). No factor related to sociodemographic conditions, HIV status or comorbidities was associated with the acceptability of antiretroviral generics. CONCLUSIONS:Acceptability of antiretroviral generics in this French population was mostly dictated by the patient's and physician's knowledge and use of generics overall. It should be improved with an efficient information of both patients and physicians.