PLoS Medicine (Jun 2019)

Changes in rapid HIV treatment initiation after national "treat all" policy adoption in 6 sub-Saharan African countries: Regression discontinuity analysis.

  • Olga Tymejczyk,
  • Ellen Brazier,
  • Constantin T Yiannoutsos,
  • Michael Vinikoor,
  • Monique van Lettow,
  • Fred Nalugoda,
  • Mark Urassa,
  • Jean d'Amour Sinayobye,
  • Peter F Rebeiro,
  • Kara Wools-Kaloustian,
  • Mary-Ann Davies,
  • Elizabeth Zaniewski,
  • Nanina Anderegg,
  • Grace Liu,
  • Nathan Ford,
  • Denis Nash,
  • IeDEA consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002822
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. e1002822

Abstract

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BackgroundMost countries have formally adopted the World Health Organization's 2015 recommendation of universal HIV treatment ("treat all"). However, there are few rigorous assessments of the real-world impact of treat all policies on antiretroviral treatment (ART) uptake across different contexts.Methods and findingsWe used longitudinal data for 814,603 patients enrolling in HIV care between 1 January 2004 and 10 July 2018 in 6 countries participating in the global International epidemiology Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA) consortium: Burundi (N = 11,176), Kenya (N = 179,941), Malawi (N = 84,558), Rwanda (N = 17,396), Uganda (N = 96,286), and Zambia (N = 425,246). Using a quasi-experimental regression discontinuity design, we assessed the change in the proportion initiating ART within 30 days of enrollment in HIV care (rapid ART initiation) after country-level adoption of the treat all policy. A modified Poisson model was used to identify factors associated with failure to initiate ART rapidly under treat all. In each of the 6 countries, over 60% of included patients were female, and median age at enrollment ranged from 32 to 36 years. In all countries studied, national adoption of treat all was associated with large increases in rapid ART initiation. Significant increases in rapid ART initiation immediately after treat all policy adoption were observed in Rwanda, from 44.4% to 78.9% of patients (34.5 percentage points [pp], 95% CI 27.2 to 41.7; p ConclusionsOur analysis indicates that adoption of treat all policies had a strong effect on increasing rates of rapid ART initiation, and that these increases followed different trajectories across the 6 countries. Young adults and men still require additional attention to further improve rapid ART initiation.