Abstract

BackgroundSouth Africa has the largest antiretroviral therapy (ART) programme in the world. To optimise programme outcomes, it is critical that patients are retained in care and that retention is accurately measured.ObjectivesTo identify all studies published in South Africa from 2011 to 2015 that used loss to follow-up (LTFU) as an indicator or outcome to describe the variation in definitions and to estimate the proportion of patients lost to care across studies.MethodAll studies published between 01 January 2011 and October 2015 that included loss to follow-up or default from ART care in a South African cohort were included by use of a broad search strategy across multiple databases. To be included, the cohort had to include any patient ART data, including follow-up time, from 01 January 2010. Two authors, working independently, extracted data and assessed risk of bias from all manuscripts. Meta-analysis was performed for studies stratified by the same loss to follow-up definition.ResultsForty-eight adult, 15 paediatric and 4 pregnant cohorts were included. Median cohort size was 3737; follow-up time ranged from 9 weeks to 5 years. Meta-analysis did not reveal an important difference in LTFU estimates in adult cohorts at 1 year between loss to follow-up defined as 3 months (11.0%, n = 4; 95% CI 10.7% – 11.2%) compared with 6 months (12.0%, n = 4; 95% CI 11.8% – 12.2%). Only two cohorts reported reliable LTFU estimates at 5 years: this was 25.1% (95% CI 24.8% – 25.4%).ConclusionSouth Africa should standardise a LTFU definition. This would aid in monitoring and evaluation of ART programmes, with the broader goal of improving patient outcomes.

Highlights

  • Note: This is Online Appendix 1 of Kaplan S, Nteso KS, Ford N, Boulle A, Meintjes G

  • Locationa

  • 16 years switching to second line ART

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Summary

Introduction

Note: This is Online Appendix 1 of Kaplan S, Nteso KS, Ford N, Boulle A, Meintjes G. Follow-up time, in months unless otherwise stated Locationa (overlapping cohorts are coded by symbol) Western Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, Eastern Cape, and Mpumalanga

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