N
Engl J Med 1994 Mar 17;330(11):763-8
Comment in:
N Engl J Med. 1994 Aug 4;331(5):333-4.
Racial differences in the use of drug therapy for HIV disease in an urban
community.
Moore RD, Stanton D, Gopalan R, Chaisson RE.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205.
BACKGROUND: Guidelines for drug therapy in human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) disease are based primarily on the stage of the disease. To
determine whether sociodemographic characteristics of patients influence
drug therapy in practice, we analyzed the use of antiretroviral therapy
and prophylactic therapy for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) in an
urban population infected with HIV.
METHODS: All patients presenting for the first time
to our HIV clinic from March 1990 through December 1992 were enrolled.
Data on sociodemographic and clinical variables and on drug use were collected
at the time of presentation and after six months. We asked whether patients
with CD4+ cell counts of 500 or less per cubic millimeter were receiving
antiretroviral therapy at the time of presentation, and whether patients
with CD4+ cell counts of 200 or less per cubic millimeter were receiving
PCP prophylaxis.
RESULTS: Among the 838 patients enrolled, 656 (79 percent)
were blacks, 167 (20 percent) were non-Hispanic whites, and 15 (2 percent)
were Asian or Hispanic descent or were not racially classified. There
were no racial differences in the stage of HIV disease at the time of
presentation. However, there were racial disparities in the receipt of
antiretroviral therapy: 63 percent of eligible whites but only 48 percent
of eligible blacks received such therapy (P = 0.003). PCP prophylaxis
was received by 82 percent of eligible whites but only 58 percent of eligible
blacks (P < 0.001). There were no significant differences in the receipt
of drug therapy with respect to age, sex, mode of HIV transmission, type
of insurance, income, education, or place of residence. In a logistic-regression
analysis, race was the feature most strongly associated with the receipt
of drug therapy. When blacks were compared with whites, the adjusted relative
odds were 0.59 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.38 to 0.93) for the
receipt of an antiretroviral agent and 0.27 (95 percent confidence interval,
0.13 to 0.56) for the receipt of PCP prophylaxis.
CONCLUSIONS: Among patients infected with HIV, blacks
were significantly less likely than whites to have received antiretroviral
therapy or PCP prophylaxis when they were first referred to an HIV clinic.
This disparity suggests a need for culturally specific interventions to
ensure uniform access to care, including drug therapy, and uniform standards
of care.
PMID: 8107743 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
N Engl J Med 1994 Aug 4;331(5):333-4
Comment on:
N Engl J Med. 1994 Mar 17;330(11):763-8.
Racial differences in the use of drug therapy for HIV disease.
Simon PA, Sorvillo FJ, Lapin RK.
Publication Types: Comment; Letter
PMID: 8022459 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]