The unintended outcome: a retrospective cross‐sectional study using a urine lateral flow assay to detect ART use reveals non‐disclosure of taking ART in South Africa's public health system
Nsika Sithole, Indira Govender, Matthew Spinelli, Theresa Smit, Siyabonga Cibane, Mlungisi Zwane, Njabulo Phakathi, Meighan Krows, Busisiwe Nkosi, Janet Seeley, Ruanne V. Barnabas, Mark J. Siedner, Mosa Moshabela, Connie Celum, Alison Grant, Monica Gandhi, Adrienne E. Shapiro

TL;DR
A urine test revealed that 20% of HIV patients in South Africa who claimed not to be on ART had recently taken it, highlighting issues with disclosure in healthcare.
Contribution
A novel urine-based lateral flow assay detected undisclosed ART use, offering a new tool for improving HIV care delivery.
Findings
20% of patients reported not taking ART but had detectable tenofovir in urine, indicating undisclosed ART use.
Undisclosed ART use was associated with older age, rural clinic location, higher CD4 count, and active TB.
Urine TFV assays could help healthcare providers identify undisclosed ART use and improve care transitions.
Abstract
Differentiated service delivery (DSD) models for HIV and tuberculosis (TB) care prioritize efficient resource allocation and targeted interventions, and benefit from accurate assessment of patients’ antiretroviral therapy (ART) pill‐taking status. Accurate ART use identification is essential for ensuring proper care transition services rather than unnecessary initiation. A point‐of‐care urine tenofovir (TFV) assay may identify undisclosed ART use in settings with high rates of TB and HIV coinfection. A cohort of people living with HIV (PWH) presenting for routine care, including newly diagnosed and those returning to care, and reporting no ART use within 90 days, was enrolled in a clinic‐based cross‐sectional study of TB prevalence which tested for TB using sputum and urine‐based TB tests in two clinics in KwaZulu‐Natal, South Africa. CD4 counts were determined at the time of ART…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · HIV/AIDS drug development and treatment · HIV Research and Treatment
