Clinical and Translational Science (Jan 2020)

Real‐Time and Wireless Assessment of Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy With Co‐Encapsulated Ingestion Sensor in HIV‐Infected Patients: A Pilot Study

  • Eric S. Daar,
  • Marc I. Rosen,
  • Yan Wang,
  • Lisa Siqueiros,
  • Jie Shen,
  • Mario Guerrero,
  • Di Xiong,
  • John Dao,
  • Todd Young,
  • Katya Corado,
  • Courtney V. Fletcher,
  • Honghu Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/cts.12701
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 189 – 194

Abstract

Read online

Adherence with antiretroviral therapy is important for preventing disease progression and HIV transmission. The co‐encapsulated pill sensor system sends a signal through a cutaneous patch and allows real‐time monitoring of pill ingestion. A 16‐week pilot study used a sensor system in 15 HIV‐infected individuals with real‐time monitoring of pill‐taking with a personalized short message system text. System acceptability was assessed by survey at weeks 4, 8, 12, and 16. Follow‐up occurred in 80% of subjects through 8 weeks. The system effectively collected measures of pill ingestion, which triggered text message reminders. Only 2 of 14 participants stated that co‐encapsulated pills were “unable to take” or “poorly tolerated.” At least 75% of respondents stated at each visit that the patch was very or somewhat comfortable. With regard to text message reminders, only 10–15% of the participants at any visit did not find the messages to be helpful. Larger studies will define the utility of this system to assess antiretroviral adherence relative to standard measures.