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Supplementary files: Multimodal intervention for pain in HIV/AIDS: depression predicts a remarkably high loss to follow-up

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Version 5 2018-04-27, 14:11
Version 4 2018-04-26, 06:40
Version 3 2018-04-26, 06:37
Version 2 2018-04-25, 12:28
Version 1 2018-04-25, 12:18
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posted on 2018-04-27, 14:11 authored by Peter KamermanPeter Kamerman, Victoria Madden, Antonia WadleyAntonia Wadley, Romy Parker, Sarah Cameron, Kirsty Jackson, Cameron Reardon
DESCRIPTION

This repository contains supplementary files for the HIV Pain Intervention Project (HIP). These files include:

- The study protocol (protocol.pdf)
- The data cleaning and data analysis R/RMarkdown scripts (scripts subdirectory)
- The outputs of the RMarkdown scripts (outputs subdirectory)

Note: Participant consent did not provide for the publication of their data, and hence neither the original nor cleaned data have been made available. However, we do not wish to bar access to the data unnecessarily and we will judge requests to access the data on a case-by-case basis. Examples of potential use cases include independent assessments of our analyses, and secondary data analyses. Please contact Prof Romy Parker (romy.parker@uct.ac.za), Dr Antonia Wadley (antonia.wadley@wits.ac.za), or open an issue on the GitHub repo (https://github.com/kamermanpr/HIP-supplement/issues).

If your request for access is successful and you wish to reproduce the analyses, we recommend that you save the demographics.xlsx and amalgamated_data.xlsx files we will supply you with into the 'original_data' directory and then run the build.R script located in the root directory of this repo. Doing so, will extract and clean the data from the two Excel files into five R data objects (demographics.rds, bpi.rds, bdi.rds, eq5d.rds, and se6.rds) located in the 'data' directory. These new data files will then be used to render the RMarkdown scripts in the 'scripts' directory, overwriting the *.md files in the 'outputs' directory.

BIBLIOGRAPHIC INFORMATION

Repository citation
Kamerman P, Madden V, Wadley A, Parker R, Cameron S, Devan D, Jackson K, Reardon C. Supplementary files: Multimodal intervention for pain in HIV/AIDS: depression predicts a remarkably high loss to follow-up. Figshare, 2018. DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.6148394

Manuscript citation
Parker R, Madden VL, Devan D, Cameron S, Jackson K, Kamerman PR, Reardon C, Wadley A. Supplementary files: Multimodal intervention for pain in HIV/AIDS: depression predicts a remarkably high loss to follow-up.

Manuscript abstract
Pain continues to affect over half of people living with HIV/AIDS and pharmacological treatment has limited efficacy. However, preliminary evidence supports non-pharmacological interventions. We previously piloted a multimodal intervention in amaXhosa women living with HIV and chronic pain in South Africa. Improvements were seen in all outcomes, in both intervention and control groups. We attempted a multicentre randomised controlled trial with 160 participants to determine whether the piloted multimodal peer-led intervention reduced pain in different populations of both male and female South Africans living with HIV/AIDS. We were unable to assess the efficacy of the intervention due to a 58% loss to follow up (LTFU). Here we describe our experience and the barriers to retention. We also discuss the limitations of traditional solutions aimed at improving feasibility of studies and interventions in this context. We found that sex, education, employment status or income stability were not associated with LTFU. The different sociocultural context in South Africa may warrant a different approach to interventions for pain in HIV compared to resource-rich countries including a concurrent strategy to address barriers to health care service delivery. We found that the one factor associated with LTFU was greater severity of depressive symptoms (p=0.01). We suggest that assessment of pain and depression need to occur simultaneously in those with pain in HIV. In PLWHA and pain who are retained in studies, that participation alone appears sufficient to improve pain and depression. We suggest investigation of the effect of social inclusion on pain and depression.

Funding

Medical Research Council of South Africa

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