Abstract

Alcohol use is associated with poor outcomes among people living with HIV (PLWH), but it remains unclear which alcohol use measures best predict future HIV viral non-suppression over time. This study aimed to compare the ability of five alcohol use measures to predict risk of suboptimal HIV viral load trajectories over 36months. We analyzed data from a cohort of PLWH in Florida including survey data linked to the state HIV surveillance system on prospective HIV viral loads over 36 months (n = 783; 66% male; 55% Black; Mage=46, SD = 11). Four trajectory patterns for HIV viral load were identified: consistently low (65.1%), decreasing (15.9%), increasing (10.6%), and consistently high (8.4%). Past year alcohol use frequency (OR = 2.1, CI:1.0-4.4), drinks consumed on a typical drinking day (OR = 2.2, CI:1.2-4.1), frequency of binge drinking (OR = 2.6, CI:1.3-5.2), and alcohol-related problems score (OR = 1.7, CI:1.1-2.7) were the measures predictive of the risk of future viral non-suppression above specific thresholds.

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