Abstract:
Background: With the increased use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), Human
Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) mortality rates are declining and the life expectancy of people
living with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (PLHIV) has dramatically improved.
Consequently, the majority of people living with HIV are living longer and facing a higher burden
of age-associated chronic comorbidities. This could lead to an increase in polypharmacy and the
risk of potentially serious drug-drug interactions (DDIs), which can cause medication toxicity, loss
of efficacy, and treatment failures.
Objective: This study aimed to assess the influence of age-associated comorbidities on the
therapeutic outcomes of HAART among PLHIV at the antiretroviral therapy (ART) clinic of Jimma
Medical Center, South West Ethiopia.
Methods: A hospital based nested case-control study design was conducted among adult HIV
infected patients at the ART clinic of Jimma Medical Center from January 3 to June 2, 2022. Data
were collected on socio-demographic, clinical characteristics of patients, comorbidities and
medication related information by interviewing patients and by reviewing patients’ medical charts
from all adult PLHIV that fulfill the inclusion criteria. The data were entered into Epi Data version
4.6.0.2 for cleaning and analyzed using a statistical package for social sciences software (SPSS)
version 26.0. Logistic regressions were used to identify factors associated with treatment outcome.
An odds ratio and confidence interval of 95% was used and the level of statistical significance was
considered at a p-value < 0.05.
Results: A total of 224 patients (112 cases and 112 controls) were included in the study. The
magnitude of immunologic and virologic failure among the study groups were (23.2% and 15.2% in
the case group versus 4.5% and 11.6% in the control group) (p<0.001). Independent predictors of
immunological failure were being male (Adjusted Odds Ratio (AOR) = 3.079 [1.139-8.327], having
non-communicable disease comorbidity [p<0.001, AOR: 10.573 (2.810-39.779)], age ≥ 50 years
(Adjusted Odds Ratio (AOR) = 2.855 [1.023-7.965], p = 0.045), history of alcohol intake (AOR =
3.648 [1.118-11.897], p = 0.032), and having a baseline CD4+ count of < 200cells/uL [p= 0.034;
AOR: 3.862 (1.109-13.456). Similarly, being alcoholic [p= 0.042; AOR: 3.111 (1.044-9.271)],
having a baseline CD4+ count of < 200cells/uL [p= 0.007; AOR: 5.111 (1.547-16.892)], a low level
of patients medication adherence [p= 0.003; AOR: 5.920 (1.810-19.362)], bedridden baseline
functional status [p= 0.020; AOR: 3.902 ( 1.237-12.307)], and not using cotrimoxazole prophylaxis
[p= 0.033; AOR: 2.735 (1.084-6.902)] were found to be an independent predictor of virologic
treatment failure but patients who were older (age≥50 years) were less likely to have virological
failure [p=0.002; AOR: 0.155 (0.047-0.512)].
Conclusion: Immunological failure was higher in patient’s comorbid with chronic age-associated
comorbidities. However, there were no statistically significant association between the existence of
age-associated chronic comorbidities and virological failur