Task Shifting for Initiation and Monitoring of Antiretroviral Therapy for HIV-Infected Adults in Uganda: The SHARE Trial

Brian Arthur Sekiziyivu, Elizabeth Bancroft, Evelyn M Rodriguez, Samuel Sendagala, Muniina Pamela Nasirumbi, Marjorie Sserunga Najjengo, Agnes N Kiragga, Joseph Musaazi, Joshua Musinguzi, Enos Sande, Bartholow Brad, Shona Dalal, Tusiime Byakika-Jayne, Andrew Kambugu, Brian Arthur Sekiziyivu, Elizabeth Bancroft, Evelyn M Rodriguez, Samuel Sendagala, Muniina Pamela Nasirumbi, Marjorie Sserunga Najjengo, Agnes N Kiragga, Joseph Musaazi, Joshua Musinguzi, Enos Sande, Bartholow Brad, Shona Dalal, Tusiime Byakika-Jayne, Andrew Kambugu

Abstract

Background: With countries moving toward the World Health Organization's "Treat All" recommendation, there is a need to initiate more HIV-infected persons into antiretroviral therapy (ART). In resource-limited settings, task shifting is 1 approach that can address clinician shortages.

Setting: Uganda.

Methods: We conducted a randomized controlled trial to test if nurse-initiated and monitored ART (NIMART) is noninferior to clinician-initiated and monitored ART in HIV-infected adults in Uganda. Study participants were HIV-infected, ART-naive, and clinically stable adults. The primary outcome was a composite end point of any of the following: all-cause mortality, virological failure, toxicity, and loss to follow-up at 12 months post-ART initiation.

Results: Over half of the study cohort (1,760) was women (54.9%). The mean age was 35.1 years (SD 9.51). Five hundred thirty-three (31.6%) participants experienced the composite end point. At 12 months post-ART initiation, nurse-initiated and monitored ART was noninferior to clinician-initiated and monitored ART. The intention-to-treat site-adjusted risk differences for the composite end point were -4.1 [97.5% confidence interval (CI): = -9.8 to 0.2] with complete case analysis and -3.4 (97.5% CI: = -9.1 to 2.5) with multiple imputation analysis. Per-protocol site-adjusted risk differences were -3.6 (97.5% CI: = -10.5 to 0.6) for complete case analysis and -3.1 (-8.8 to 2.8) for multiple imputation analysis. This difference was within hypothesized margins (6%) for noninferiority.

Conclusions: Nurses were noninferior to clinicians for initiation and monitoring of ART. Task shifting to trained nurses is a viable means to increase access to ART. Future studies should evaluate NIMART for other groups (e.g., children, adolescents, and unstable patients).

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02417636.

Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Copyright © 2020 Written work prepared by employees of the Federal Government as part of their official duties is, under the U.S. Copyright Act, a “work of the United States Government” for which copyright protection under Title 17 of the United States Code is not available. As such, copyright does not extend to the contributions of employees of the Federal Government.

Figures

FIGURE 1.
FIGURE 1.
Participant flow.
FIGURE 2.
FIGURE 2.
Site-adjusted risk difference for end points and 97.5% CIs between nurse arm and clinician arm at 12 months. Dotted vertical line indicates the a priori noninferiority margin (

FIGURE 3.

Kaplan–Meier survival from composite events.…

FIGURE 3.

Kaplan–Meier survival from composite events. Time to first event was about 9 days…

FIGURE 3.
Kaplan–Meier survival from composite events. Time to first event was about 9 days in clinician arm and 14 days in nurse arm. Event included death, LTFU, and toxicity, but not VF.
FIGURE 3.
FIGURE 3.
Kaplan–Meier survival from composite events. Time to first event was about 9 days in clinician arm and 14 days in nurse arm. Event included death, LTFU, and toxicity, but not VF.

Source: PubMed

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