Barriers and facilitators to chemotherapy initiation and adherence for patients with HIV-associated Kaposi’s sarcoma in Kenya: a qualitative study

Infectious Agents and Cancer - Tập 17 - Trang 1-15 - 2022
Devon E. McMahon1, Rhea Singh1,2, Linda Chemtai3, Aggrey Semeere4, Helen Byakwaga4, Merridy Grant5, Miriam Laker-Oketta4, Celestine Lagat3, Sigrid Collier6, Toby Maurer7, Jeffrey Martin8, Ingrid V. Bassett1, Lisa Butler9, Samson Kiprono3, Naftali Busakhala3,10, Esther E. Freeman1
1Department of Dermatology, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA
2Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, Richmond, USA
3AMPATH, Moi University, Eldoret, Kenya
4Infectious Disease Institute, Kampala, Uganda
5University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban, South Africa
6University of Washington SEATTLE USA
7Indiana University, Indianapolis, USA
8University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, USA
9[University of Connecticut, Storrs, USA]
10Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Moi University, Eldoret, Kenya

Tóm tắt

Kaposi sarcoma is one of the most prevalent HIV-associated malignancies in sub-Saharan Africa and is often diagnosed at advanced stage of disease. Only 50% of KS patients who qualify for chemotherapy receive it and adherence is sub-optimal. 57 patients > 18 years with newly diagnosed KS within the AMPATH clinic network in Western Kenya were purposively selected to participate in semi-structured interviews stratified by whether they had completed, partially completed, or not completed chemotherapy for advanced stage KS. We based the interview guide and coding framework on the situated Information, Motivation, Behavioral Skills (sIMB) framework, in which the core patient centered IMB constructs are situated into the socioecological context of receiving care. Of the 57 participants, the median age was 37 (IQR 32–41) and the majority were male (68%). Notable barriers to chemotherapy initiation and adherence included lack of financial means, difficulty with convenience of appointments such as distance to facility, appointment times, long lines, limited appointments, intrapersonal barriers such as fear or hopelessness, and lack of proper or sufficient information about chemotherapy. Factors that facilitated chemotherapy initiation and adherence included health literacy, motivation to treat symptoms, improvement on chemotherapy, prioritization of self-care, resilience while experiencing side effects, ability to carry out behavioral skills, obtaining national health insurance, and free chemotherapy. Our findings about the barriers and facilitators to chemotherapy initiation and adherence for KS in Western Kenya support further work that promotes public health campaigns with reliable cancer and chemotherapy information, improves education about the chemotherapy process and side effects, increases oncology service ability, supports enrollment in national health insurance, and increases incorporation of chronic disease care into existing HIV treatment networks.

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