• J. Investig. Med. · Oct 2024

    Emerging from the Shadows: Trends in HIV Ambulatory Care, Viral Load Testing, and Viral Suppression in a U.S. HIV Cohort, 2019-2022: Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic.

    • Ellen Tedaldi, Qingjiang Hou, Carl Armon, Jonathan D Mahnken, Frank J Palella F, Gina Simoncini, Jack Fuhrer, Cynthia Mayer, Alexander Ewing, Kalliope Chagaris, Kimberly J Carlson, Jun Li, and Kate Buchacz.
    • Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
    • J. Investig. Med. 2024 Oct 1; 72 (7): 661673661-673.

    AbstractThis article aimed at analyzing the acute impact and the longer-term recovery of COVID-19 pandemic effects on clinical encounter types, HIV viral load (VL) testing, and suppression (HIV VL < 200 copies/mL). This study was a longitudinal cohort study of participants seen during 2019-2022 at nine HIV Outpatient Study (HOPS) sites. Generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) estimated monthly rates of all encounters, office and telemedicine visits, and HIV VL tests using 2010-2022 data. We examined factors associated with nonsuppressed VL (VL ≥ 200 copies/mL) and not having ambulatory care visits during the pandemic using GLMM for logistic regression with 2017-2022 and 2019-2022 data, respectively. Of 2351 active participants, 76.0% were male, 57.6% aged ≥ 50 years, 40.7% non-Hispanic White, 38.2% non-Hispanic Black, 17.3% Hispanic/Latino, and 51.0% publicly insured. The monthly rates of in-person and telemedicine visits varied during 2020 through mid-year 2022. Multivariable logistic regression showed that persons with no encounters were more likely to be male or have VL ≥ 200 copies/mL. For participants with ≥1 VL test, the prevalence rate of HIV VL ≥ 200 copies/mL during 2020 was close to the rates from 2014 to 2019. The change in probability of viral suppression was not associated with participant's age, sex, race/ethnicity, or insurance type. In the HOPS, overall patient encounters declined over 2 years during the pandemic with variations in telemedicine and in-person events, with relative maintenance of viral suppression. Ongoing recovery from the impact of COVID-19 on ambulatory care will require continued efforts to improve retention and patient access to medical services.

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