| Race/ethnicity 
and Income Impact HIV Treatment Access and Outcomes By 
Liz Highleyman  Three 
decades into the HIV/AIDS epidemic, evidence continues to accumulate showing that 
people of different racial/groups and socioeconomic status have disparate experiences 
with HIV and its treatment 
-- even though antiretroviral therapy 
works similarly regardless of race (though some side effects appear to vary).
 African-Americans 
and Hispanics/Latinos are overrepresented in the total number of people living 
with HIV/AIDS and blacks 
have the highest rate of new infections. These groups also tend to access 
care later, and thus may have poorer outcomes. Two 
presentations at the 48th International Conference on Antimicrobial 
Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC) last week in Washington, DC, looked at differences 
in HIV treatment outcomes by race/ethnicity. Risk 
Factors for Hospital Outcomes Researchers 
from the University of Texas at Austin sought to understand factors associated 
with poor health outcomes in HIV positive people of different racial/ethnic groups. 
As background, they noted that some groups are believed to have higher rates of 
comorbidities such as hepatitis 
C virus (HCV) coinfection, opportunistic 
infections (OIs), and substance abuse. However, it is unclear if race/ethnicity 
is an independent predictor of length of hospital stays or death while hospitalized 
after accounting for these other factors. The 
investigators extracted data from the 1996-2005 National Hospital Discharge Survey 
-- annual national surveys conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics 
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) -- and used ICD-9-CM codes 
to identify individuals with HIV/AIDS, HCV, OIs, and substance abuse. People younger 
than 18 years and those who left the hospital against medical advice were excluded. 
Data included patient age, sex, race/ethnicity, insurance status, source of admission, 
length of stay, and discharge status.  Results 	
 
     14,153 cases, representing 1.3 million 
national discharges, met the inclusion criteria (51% black and 27% white).
  
     Black and white patients were similar 
with respect to median age (41 years), but whites were more likely to be male 
(82% vs 62%; P < 0.0001).
 
  
     Black patients were more likely than whites 
to have diagnosed substance abuse (25% vs 20%; P < 0.0001) and OIs (39% vs 
37%; P = 0.0463).
 
  
     Whites, however, were more to have HIV-HCV 
coinfection (10% vs 8%; P = 0.0022).
 
  
     More black patients than whites used cocaine 
(43% vs 20%; P = 0.0001), but fewer blacks used alcohol (28% vs 33%; P = 0.0326) 
or tobacco (18% vs 24%; P < 0.0001).
 
  
     Black race (about 4 times greater likelihood), 
OIs (about 14 times greater), cocaine use (about 45 times greater), and older 
age (> 49 years) (about 20 times greater) independently predicted a higher 
risk of in-hospital death, although HCV coinfection did not.
 
  
     Black race remained an independent predictor 
of in-hospital mortality (P = 0.0391) and length of hospital stay (P = 0.0496) 
after controlling for age, OIs, HCV coinfection, and cocaine use.
 Based 
on these findings, the researchers concluded, "Black HIV/AIDS patients admitted 
to U.S. hospitals have higher rates of opportunistic infection, cocaine use, stay 
longer, and are more likely to die during hospitalization."
 "Our 
study demonstrates that blacks have higher rates of associated illnesses and hospital 
admissions, longer hospital stays, and more deaths compared to white patients," 
said lead investigator Christine Oramasionwu in a press release issued by ICAAC. 
"Alarmingly, these disparities persist even after years of experience with 
effective medications to reduce HIV complications. Black patients often don't 
seek care until they are sick with all these illness -- and by then it is too 
late."
 
 The researchers were not able to explain the lower rate of 
HCV coinfection among blacks in this study, given that some prior research suggests 
they may have a higher coinfection rate.
 
 Univ. of Texas, Austin, TX.
 Treatment 
Outcomes in WIHS In 
a related study, investigators with the large Women's Interagency HIV Study (WIHS) 
looked at disparities in the likelihood of receiving HAART and whether these are 
influenced by substance abuse and health insurance status. The 
analysis included a subset of WIHS participants for whom HAART was clinically 
indicated (CD4 count < 350 cellls/mm3 or HIV viral load > 50,000 copies/mL) 
in 2002 (n = 1463) and in 2005 (n = 1345), controlling for measures of substance 
abuse, health insurance, and other potential confounding factors.  Results  
 
     About 30% of treatment-eligible women 
were not receiving antiretroviral therapy in both 2002 and 2005.
  
     In 2002 and in 2005, African-American 
women were about twice as likely as white women to not be receiving HAART.
 
  
     After adjusting for potential confounders, 
the likelihood of not receiving HAART remained greater for African-American women 
-- but not for Latina women -- compared with white women.
 
  
     Disparities in HAART use according to 
race/ethnicity improved -- but did not disappear -- by 2005.
 
  
     The effects of substance use changed during 
the study period:
 
  
 
     Alcohol use -- including moderate or light 
use -- was related to lack of HAART in both years; 
  
     Illicit/recreational drug use was not 
significantly associated with lack of HAART.
  
 
     Having health insurance was associated 
with a significantly greater likelihood of receiving HAART in both years, as was 
enrolled in an AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP). 
  
     Uninsured or privately insured women were 
about 4 times as likely as women on Medicaid to not be receiving HAART in 2002, 
and about twice as likely in 2005.
 
  
     Women enrolled in ADAP had a lower likelihood 
of not receiving HAART than non-participants (OR 0.53 in 2005).
 The 
researchers concluded that, "Substantial disparities in receipt of HAART 
persist by race/ethnicity among women with HIV/AIDS." "Disparities 
exist even after controlling for health insurance and substance abuse," they 
continued. "However, having Medicaid and/or ADAP appears to improve access 
to HAART." "Some 
narrowing of disparities was seen over the 2002-2005 period," they noted, 
but recommend that efforts to address remaining disparities are warranted. George 
Washington Univ, Washington, DC; Harvard Med. School, Boston, MA; Wake Forest 
Univ School of Med., Winston-Salem, NC.
 11/07/08
 
 References
 
 CU 
Oramasionwu, l Ryan, and CR Frei. Disparities in Comorbid Conditions among White 
and Black HIV/AIDS Patients in the United States National Hospital Discharge Survey 
(NHDS). 48th International Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 
(ICAAC 2008). Washington, DC. October 25-28, 2008. Abstract H-445.
 
 M Lillie-Blanton, 
VE Stone, and A Snow Jones. Race, Drug Use & Insurance Coverage in Use of 
HAART among HIV Positive Women, 2002-2005. 48th International Conference on Antimicrobial 
Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2008). Washington, DC. October 25-28, 2008. Abstract 
H-444.
 
 Other source
 ICAAC. HIV/AIDS-Related Ethnic Health Disparities 
in the United States. Press release. October 25, 2008.
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