Correcting mortality estimates among children and youth on antiretroviral therapy in southern Africa: A comparative analysis between a multi-country tracing study and linkage to a health information exchange.

Nyakato, Patience; Schomaker, Michael; Boulle, Andrew; Euvrard, Jonathan; Wood, Robin; Eley, Brian; Prozesky, Hans; Christ, Benedikt; Anderegg, Nanina; Ayakaka, Irene; Rafael, Idiovino; Kunzekwenyika, Cordelia; Moore, Carolyn B; van Lettow, Monique; Chimbetete, Cleophas; Mbewe, Safari; Ballif, Marie; Egger, Matthias; Yiannoutsos, Constantin T; Cornell, Morna; ... (2024). Correcting mortality estimates among children and youth on antiretroviral therapy in southern Africa: A comparative analysis between a multi-country tracing study and linkage to a health information exchange. Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH, 29(8), pp. 739-751. Wiley 10.1111/tmi.14030

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OBJECTIVES

The objective of this study is to assess the outcomes of children, adolescents and young adults with HIV reported as lost to follow-up, correct mortality estimates for children, adolescents and young adults with HIV for unascertained outcomes in those loss to follow-up (LTFU) based on tracing and linkage data separately using data from the International epidemiology Databases to Evaluate AIDS in Southern Africa.

METHODS

We included data from two different populations of children, adolescents and young adults with HIV; (1) clinical data from children, adolescents and young adults with HIV aged ≤24 years from Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe; (2) clinical data from children, adolescents and young adults with HIV aged ≤14 years from the Western Cape (WC) in South Africa. Outcomes of patients lost to follow-up were available from (1) a tracing study and (2) linkage to a health information exchange. For both populations, we compared six methods for correcting mortality estimates for all children, adolescents and young adults with HIV.

RESULTS

We found substantial variations of mortality estimates among children, adolescents and young adults with HIV reported as lost to follow-up versus those retained in care. Ascertained mortality was higher among lost and traceable children, adolescents and young adults with HIV and lower among lost and linkable than those retained in care (mortality: 13.4% [traced] vs. 12.6% [retained-other Southern Africa countries]; 3.4% [linked] vs. 9.4% [retained-WC]). A high proportion of lost to follow-up children, adolescents and young adults with HIV had self-transferred (21.0% and 47.0%) in the traced and linked samples, respectively. The uncorrected method of non-informative censoring yielded the lowest mortality estimates among all methods for both tracing (6.0%) and linkage (4.0%) approaches at 2 years from ART start. Among corrected methods using ascertained data, multiple imputation, incorporating ascertained data (MI(asc.)) and inverse probability weighting with logistic weights were most robust for the tracing approach. In contrast, for the linkage approach, MI(asc.) was the most robust.

CONCLUSIONS

Our findings emphasise that lost to follow-up is non-ignorable and both tracing and linkage improved outcome ascertainment: tracing identified substantial mortality in those reported as lost to follow-up, whereas linkage did not identify out-of-facility deaths, but showed that a large proportion of those reported as lost to follow-up were self-transfers.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Pre-clinic Human Medicine > Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine (ISPM)

UniBE Contributor:

Christ, Martin Benedikt, Anderegg, Nanina Tamar, Ballif, Marie, Egger, Matthias

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology > 360 Social problems & social services

ISSN:

1365-3156

Publisher:

Wiley

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

04 Jul 2024 15:36

Last Modified:

06 Aug 2024 13:27

Publisher DOI:

10.1111/tmi.14030

PubMed ID:

38961819

Uncontrolled Keywords:

children and youth linkage loss to follow‐up mortality self‐transfer tracing

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/198530

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/198530

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