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Antidepressant therapy can improve adherence to antiretroviral regimens among HIV-infected and depressed patients

Authors :
Chiara Conti
Mario Fulcheri
Katia Falasca
Jacopo Vecchiet
Pio Conti
Margherita Dalessandro
Francesco Caciagli
Francesco Gambi
Robert Doyle
Source :
Journal of clinical psychopharmacology. 27(1)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Several strategies have been introduced to manage nonadherence to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Treatment with antidepressants may improve self-reported adherence. In this brief report, a small sample of HIV-depressed patients (n = 9) were treated for a 6-month period with antidepressants improving self-reported adherence based on the HAART scale (poor, good, satisfactory, and optimal). Before the antidepressant treatment, adherence was reported as "good" by 3 patients and "satisfactory" by 6 patients. After antidepressant therapy, adherence to antiretroviral regimes was statistically higher in HIV-depressed on treatment than in HIV-depressed patients not treated with antidepressants (P0.0001). We used chi2 test with a significance level at P0.05. Treating depression in HIV-infected patients may serve to improve adherence to HAART.

Details

ISSN :
02710749
Volume :
27
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical psychopharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....71e42ef2d3a05b9b803529cf948af706