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Home»Art Rate»Home injections for HIV treatment show equal safety and satisfaction
Art Rate

Home injections for HIV treatment show equal safety and satisfaction

By MilyeMay 1, 20255 Mins Read
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Long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy (ART) can be administered at home to persons living with HIV as safely and effectively by a health care professional as in the clinic, with equally high patient satisfaction rates, according to a new study conducted by MUSC Health Infectious Diseases clinician Eric Meissner, M.D., Ph.D., an associate professor in the College of Medicine. The findings of the study were published in March in Clinical Infectious Diseases.

This project was designed at the time that injectable treatment for HIV infection received approval, and so we were inspired to try to think of new ways for the persons we care for to be able to access it.”


Eric Meissner, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor, College of Medicine, MUSC

In the past three decades, ART has profoundly changed the lives of those living with HIV, transforming what was once considered a death sentence into something more akin to a manageable chronic disease. In 2023, almost 31 million people received ART, or about 77% of all people living with HIV. Studies have shown that 9 in 10 people who take ART medications as prescribed will have undetectable levels of the virus within a year. People who achieve undetectable levels early in the course of their disease can live long lives, and they are unlikely to spread the virus to others, including unborn children. It is estimated that ART saves more than a million lives each year.

Unfortunately, in 2022, fewer than 65% of persons living with HIV in the U.S. achieved undetectable levels of the virus, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, suggesting that patients did not always take ART as directed. When orally administered, ART must be taken daily. Some patients find it burdensome to take the medications daily or fear being stigmatized when they fill their prescriptions at a public pharmacy. Such barriers can discourage patients from taking the ART medications as their doctors suggest and can prevent them from attaining undetectable virus levels.

Long-acting injectable ART could be an answer, as it is given much more infrequently. Initially prescribed once monthly for persons living with HIV who did not gain full benefit from oral administration, long-acting injectable ART now need be administered only once every other month. Studies have shown that these long-acting injectables make it more likely that patients will take medications as prescribed.

“For some people who struggle with daily pill medications for HIV, there have been studies showing that the injectable treatment does improve adherence and clinical outcomes,” said Meissner.

These injections must be given by a health care professional and are typically given when the patient is in the clinic. When long-acting injectables were approved for persons living with HIV who had not achieved undetectable limits with oral administration, Meissner took things a step further to determine whether long-acting injectables could be administered safely and effectively at home instead of in the clinic.

In Meissner’s study, 33 participants who had been prescribed long-acting injectable ART by their physicians were offered the choice of receiving the therapy in the MUSC Health Infectious Disease Clinic or at home. The South Carolina Clinical & Translational Research Institute provided regulatory and survey support for the study.

Slightly more than half of participants (18) chose the clinic and 15 chose to receive their treatments at home. Participants were free to change their minds at any time and opt for the other treatment group.

The study found that, despite this freedom, most participants stuck with their original treatment choices. All patients in both groups who completed 12 months of treatment attained virological suppression. Patient satisfaction scores were also very high for both groups, and no serious safety issues were observed for either group. More than half of participants experienced some temporary injection-site irritation, but there was no difference between the in-clinic and at-home groups.

For those choosing at-home therapy, Meissner and his team coordinated with the pharmacy to mail patients their medications, which were then stored in the refrigerator until the visit by the licensed practical nurse (LPN) who would give the injection. The same LPN administered long-acting injectable ART for all participants receiving therapy at home, and the study found high patient satisfaction with the continuity of care that this provided.

The study answered another of Meissner’s questions – what influenced participants to choose either the clinic or at home. The answer for both was the same: convenience.

“Convenience was far and away the most commonly stated reason driving the preference for where to receive treatment,” said Meissner. “I think that relates to the fact that a significant percentage of our cohort doesn’t live right next to our clinic. Many may have difficulty with the time and the logistics of transportation required to come to our downtown clinic.”

Despite the high patient satisfaction with at-home administration of long-acting injectables, it will be challenging to make this a routine option for persons living with HIV. Providing the medication by mail and scheduling the LPN visits required considerable logistical coordination by staff. Currently, insurance does not reimburse for these additional steps, making it unlikely that physicians will be able to offer this option. If these challenges can be overcome, however, Meissner’s study suggests that many patients would benefit and appreciate the option, which could encourage them to follow the treatment course set out by their physicians.

“As to administering injectable HIV treatment in someone’s home, we found it to be safe, feasible and associated with high satisfaction for the people who elected to receive it there,” said Meissner. “And so I’m enthusiastic for continued systematic and infrastructure-based efforts to provide people with more choices about where to receive this treatment.”

Source:

Medical University of South Carolina

Journal reference:

Kirk, S. E., et al. (2024). Comparison of At-Home Versus In-Clinic Receipt of Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir/Rilpivirine. Clinical Infectious Diseases : An Official Publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciae472.



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