Mortality rates are significantly higher among HIV-positive
patients in the US whose care is paid for by public compared to private
insurance, investigators report in the online edition of AIDS.
The study included individuals enrolled in the HIV
Outpatient Study (HOPS) who received care between 1996 and 2007.
Among patients with a CD4 cell count above 200 cells/mm3,
mortality rates were significantly higher in patients whose care was paid for
by public insurance. This finding remained significant after controlling for
potential confounders.
Non-AIDS-related illnesses were an important cause of death
among patients relying on public funds, and the investigators believe that much
of this mortality could be avoided with appropriate screening and care.
But their findings do not, the investigators stress, show
that public-funded HIV care was inferior.
However, they do believe that they have important
implications for current debates in the US about the funding of healthcare.
They comment, “the population of persons whose access to healthcare was
principally through public sources was significantly enriched in patients
diagnosed with comorbidities – usually treatable and often preventable.”
Thanks to antiretroviral therapy the prognosis many patients
with HIV now excellent. However, even with treatment mortality are higher for
patients with HIV compared with individuals in the general population.
Few studies have investigated the factors associated with
an increased risk of death for patients taking HIV therapy.
Therefore researchers from the HOPS study examined the
medical records of patients who had at least two follow-up visits and had taken
potent antiretroviral therapy for at least 75% of their time in care.
The 3752 patients eligible for inclusion in the study were
predominantly male (84%) and racially diverse. Most (60%) were white, 29% were
black and 12% Hispanic. The majority of patients (57%) had private insurance with
32% having public insurance. A history of substance abuse was reported by a
third of patients, 54% were smokers, and 62% had an AIDS diagnosis at baseline.
Patients were followed for a median of 4.7 years. During
this time a total of 311 individuals died, providing an overall mortality rate
of 1.6 per 100 person years.
Initial analysis showed that publicly insured individuals
had a higher risk of death than patients who had private insurance (p <
0.05).
Other factors associated with a higher risk of death were
older age, injecting drug use, progression to AIDS, nadir and baseline CD4 cell
count, a lower CD4 cell count at the time HIV therapy was started, a higher
baseline viral load, co-infection with hepatitis B and/or hepatitis C, smoking,
and lack of an HIV resistance rest.
Further analysis showed that it was only among patients with
a CD4 cell count above 200 cells/mm3 that public versus private
insurance was associated with an increased risk of death (adjusted harazard
ratio, 2.03, 95% CI, 1.32-3.14).
“This finding suggests that the increased risk of death was
not a consequence of HIV-related morbidity per se,” comment the researchers.
Causes of death were then examined by the investigators.
They found that that when compared to privately insured
patients a higher proportion of deaths in publicly insured patients were due
to cardiovascular disease (30% vs. 15%) and liver disease (24% vs. 12%).
Furthermore, compared to white patients, deaths in black
patients were more likely (p < 0.05) to be due to cardiovascular disease
(32% vs. 20%) or renal disease (23% vs. 7%).
An analysis of serious non-HIV-related illness in the
patients who died showed that those with public insurance were more likely (p
< 0.05) than patients with private insurance to have cardiovascular disease
(26% vs. 13%), renal disease (25% vs. 13%), and hepatitis B/and or hepatitis C
(48% vs. 18%).
Finally, the investigators looked at the characteristics of
all patients with a CD4 cell count above 200 cells/mm3 and that
publicly insured patients had a higher prevalence (p < 0.05) of hepatitis
co-infections (29% vs. 9%), hypertension (35% vs. 19%), diabetes (7% vs. 2%)
and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (6% vs. 1%).
“Obesity and viral hepatitis coinfection as well as many
other comorbidities that were differentially increased among publically
insured…participants represent preventable often treatable conditions,” write
the authors, “hence timely identification and treatment of comorbidities has
emerged as an important component of HIV medical care.”