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Interventions to reengage people living with HIV who are lost to follow-up from HIV treatment programs: A systematic review and meta-analysis

  • Ali Mirzazadeh ,

    Roles Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Resources, Software, Supervision, Validation, Visualization, Writing – original draft

    Ali.Mirzazadeh@ucsf.edu

    Affiliation Division of Infectious Disease and Global Epidemiology, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and Institute for Global Health Sciences, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America

  • Ingrid Eshun-Wilson,

    Roles Conceptualization, Data curation, Funding acquisition, Methodology, Supervision, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Division of Infectious Diseases, School of Medicine, Washington University at St Louis, St Louis, Missouri, United States of America

  • Ryan R. Thompson,

    Roles Data curation, Investigation, Methodology, Validation, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Francis I. Proctor Foundation, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America

  • Atousa Bonyani,

    Roles Data curation, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Validation, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation World Health Organization, Tehran, Iran

  • James G. Kahn,

    Roles Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Validation, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America

  • Stefan D. Baral,

    Roles Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Resources, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America

  • Sheree Schwartz,

    Roles Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Resources, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America

  • George Rutherford,

    Roles Conceptualization, Investigation, Resources, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Division of Infectious Disease and Global Epidemiology, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and Institute for Global Health Sciences, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America

  • Elvin H. Geng

    Roles Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliations Division of Infectious Diseases, School of Medicine, Washington University at St Louis, St Louis, Missouri, United States of America, Center for Dissemination and Implementation, Institute for Public Health, Washington University in St. Louis, St Louis, Missouri, United States of America

Abstract

Background

Optimizing services to facilitate engagement and retention in care of people living with HIV (PLWH) on antiretroviral therapies (ARTs) is critical to decrease HIV-related morbidity and mortality and HIV transmission. We systematically reviewed the literature for the effectiveness of implementation strategies to reestablish and subsequently retain clinical contact, improve viral load suppression, and reduce mortality among patients who had been lost to follow-up (LTFU) from HIV services.

Methods and findings

We searched 7 databases (PubMed, Cochrane, ERIC, PsycINFO, EMBASE, Web of Science, and the WHO regional databases) and 3 conference abstract archives (CROI, IAC, and IAS) to find randomized trials and observational studies published through 13 April 2020. Eligible studies included those involving children and adults who were diagnosed with HIV, had initiated ART, and were subsequently lost to care and that reported at least one review outcome (return to care, retention, viral suppression, or mortality). Data were extracted by 2 reviewers, with discrepancies resolved by a third. We characterized reengagement strategies according to how, where, and by whom tracing was conducted. We explored effects, first, among all categorized as LTFU from the HIV program (reengagement program effect) and second among those found to be alive and out of care (reengagement contact outcome). We used random-effect models for meta-analysis and conducted subgroup analyses to explore heterogeneity. Searches yielded 4,244 titles, resulting in 37 included studies (6 randomized trials and 31 observational studies). In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) (N = 16), tracing most frequently involved identification of LTFU from the electronic medical record (EMR) and paper records followed by a combination of telephone calls and field tracing (including home visits), by a team of outreach workers within 3 months of becoming LTFU (N = 7), with few incorporating additional strategies to support reengagement beyond contact (N = 2). In high-income countries (HICs) (N = 21 studies), LTFU were similarly identified through EMR systems, at times matched with other public health records (N = 4), followed by telephone calls and letters sent by mail or email and conducted by outreach specialist teams. Home visits were less common (N = 7) than in LMICs, and additional reengagement support was similarly infrequent (N = 5). Overall, reengagement programs were able to return 39% (95% CI: 31% to 47%) of all patients who were characterized as LTFU (n = 29). Reengagement contact resulted in 58% (95% CI: 51% to 65%) return among those found to be alive and out of care (N = 17). In 9 studies that had a control condition, the return was higher among those in the reengagement intervention group than the standard of care group (RR: 1.20 (95% CI: 1.08 to 1.32, P < 0.001). There were insufficient data to generate pooled estimates of retention, viral suppression, or mortality after the return.

Conclusions

While the types of interventions are markedly heterogeneity, reengagement interventions increase return to care. HIV programs should consider investing in systems to better characterize LTFU to identify those who are alive and out of care, and further research on the optimum time to initiate reengagement efforts after missed visits and how to best support sustained reengagement could improve efficiency and effectiveness.

Author summary

Why was this study done?

  • Sustained engagement and retention in HIV care is critical for optimal HIV treatment outcomes and reduced HIV transmission.
  • For many people living with HIV, disengagement is inevitable during the long course of HIV treatment.
  • It remains unclear which combination of reengagement strategies are most effective and under what conditions.

What did the researchers do and find?

  • Our systematic review identified 37 studies (6 randomized trials and 31 observational studies), 16 of which were conducted in low- and middle-income countries.
  • The majority of randomized trials were assessed as low risk (N = 3) or of some concern (N = 3) regarding the methodological quality. Most cohort studies that had a control condition were also assessed as good quality (N = 7 out of 10).
  • Based on our meta-analysis, reengagement programs were able to return 39% of all patients who were characterized as lost to follow-up, reengagement contact resulted in 58% return among those found to be alive and out of care.
  • In 9 studies that had a control condition, the return was 20% higher among those in the reengagement intervention group than the standard of care.

What do these findings mean?

  • Despite marked heterogeneity of intervention characteristics, reengagement interventions may increase return to care.
  • Further research on the optimum time to initiate reengagement efforts after missed visits and how to best support sustained reengagement could improve efficiency and effectiveness.

Introduction

While sustained engagement and retention in HIV care are critical for optimal HIV treatment outcomes and reduced HIV transmission, for many people living with HIV (PLWH), disengagement is inevitable during the long course of HIV treatment. Reasons for disengagement are varied in both high- and low-income settings, and include health system, structural, and psychosocial barriers to care [17]. Many PLWH will return to care after a short gap without intervention, while others will remain out of care for longer periods, resulting in clinical deterioration, persistent viremia, and ongoing HIV transmission in the community [2,8,9]. Reengagement interventions have the potential to hasten return by improving access to care and assisting PLWH to overcome barriers to return.

Although outreach to those who are lost to follow-up (LTFU) forms part of many HIV program operations, it remains unclear which combination of reengagement strategies are most effective and under what conditions. Difficulties faced by reengagement programs include as a first step enumerating those who have truly disengaged (are alive and out of care) as opposed to those characterized as LTFU (which frequently includes PLWH who have died or transferred care). Programs are then faced with a number of strategies to incorporate depending on expertise and resources. Reengagement strategies most frequently include attempts to contact patients and encourage return, in some cases followed by specific strategies that support return such as provider or patient notification systems [10], peer or provider navigation [11], intensive case management and outreach follow-up [12], and transport support interventions. Understanding which of the reengagement strategies’ components are most effective and when the reengagement should be started and for whom could aid the development of future reengagement programs.

To characterize reengagement strategies and explore the effectiveness of reengagement programs on return to the care, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of interventions to improve return to care among PLWH lost to HIV programs globally.

Methods

Our search, screening, study selection, analysis, and methods were described and registered a priori in PROSPERO (PROSPERO 2019 # CRD42019130436).

Inclusion criteria and outcome definitions

We included studies conducted in PLWH on antiretroviral therapy (ART) of any age and considered LTFU (unknown treatment outcomes) by HIV programs. Reengagement interventions included strategies aimed at identifying care status among those LTFU and encouraging return to care among those found alive and out of care. Interventions may have been directed toward patients (such as peer or provider outreach into the community and navigation) and toward providers and clinics (e.g., through reminders and alerts). We included observational studies with or without comparators, randomized controlled trials (RCTs), and non-RCTs. Comparative arms included standard of care (SOC) or other reengagement interventions.

We consider reengagement interventions to have 2 types of effects. First, the effect of the entire program of reengagement (including the filtering of records and tracing to identify true outcomes) as the effects of a “reengagement program” (Fig 1), which we broadly consider a measure of “effectiveness.” This is in part motivated by the fact that activities to ascertain outcomes often cannot be fully distinguished from activities to return patients (e.g., a telephone call to find the status of the patient could also influence return). In addition, the entire body of effort that goes into returning a patient must include identifying the patient who is out of care, and therefore efforts to classify is part of the programmatic reality of efforts to return patients. The second type of effects are those of actually contacting a patient who is out of care. We call this the effects of “reengagement contact,” which is analogous to “efficacy.” Additional study outcomes included retention on ART, viral suppression, and all-cause mortality following subsequent return at any time point as reported in the paper.

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Fig 1. Flow diagram depicting reengagement outcomes: (1) reengagement program outcome; and (2) reengagement contact outcome.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003940.g001

Search strategy

We searched 7 databases, which included PubMed, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Education Resource Information Center (ERIC), PsycINFO, EMBASE, Web of Science, the WHO regional databases (using Global Index Medicus metasearch engine), and conference abstract archives on the websites of the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), the International AIDS Conference (IAC), and the International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Science (since 2017). We also searched for ongoing trials in the National Institutes of Health’s trials registry at ClinicalTrials.gov and the WHO International Clinical Trial Registries Platform (ICTRP) and examined the bibliographies of included studies and other relevant references. Details of our search strategy are provided in Appendix A in S1 Text.

Screening and data extraction

The abstract and full-text screening was done independently in Covidence [13] by 2 coauthors, and discrepancies were resolved by a third author. After confirming eligibility, a single author extracted data, verified by a second author. The following data were extracted from each included study: (1) location; (2) study design; (3) population (sample size, age, sex, proportion of key populations, inclusion/exclusion criteria); (4) intervention and comparator characteristics; and (5) outcomes: primary and secondary outcomes, extracted when possible with numerators, denominators, and/or measures of association (we extracted the number of all patients who were LTFU, traced and successfully contacted, died, moved out, transferred clinics, incarcerated, hospitalized, or lost for other reasons). Any discrepancies were resolved by discussion among the authors.

Assessments of methodological quality, real-world relevance, and GRADE

We assessed the risk of bias according to the Cochrane Handbook [14] for RCTs or Newcastle–Ottawa Scale tool criteria [15] for observational studies. To further assess the generalizability of study findings, we used the PRECIS-2 checklist to assess how pragmatic or explanatory studies included in the comparative analyses were [16]. We applied the tool’s 9 domains (eligibility, recruitment/cohort selection, setting, organization, flexibility: delivery, flexibility: adherence, follow-up, primary outcome, primary analysis) to determine how applicable findings might be to real-world settings. We additionally evaluated the certainty of the body of evidence contributing to pooled effect estimates for comparative analyses using criteria recommended by the GRADE Working Group [1721].

This study is reported as per the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guideline (Appendix G in S1 Text).

Analysis

We calculated the proportion returned to care according to 2 outcome definitions (Fig 1). The “reengagement program outcome” was calculated as the number who returned to care at the original clinic out of all LTFU after the intervention was initiated, and the second definition was the number who returned to care at the original clinic after the intervention was initiated among those who were identified to be alive and out of care (disengaged). The proportions retained, virally suppressed, and died were calculated among those who returned to care. For each individual study, we calculated the proportion and the score (Wilson) confidence intervals [22] using the metaprop command in STATA (version 15.1). In studies that had a comparator (control condition), the adjusted risk ratio (RR) or risk difference (RD) point estimate and the lower and upper limits of the 95% confidence interval (CI) were extracted. We used random effect models based on the inverse variance method (metan command in STATA v. 15.1) to pool the proportions or effect measures. We conducted subgroup analyses by study design, country income, tracing type, time when tracing started, time when outcome measured, the definition of LTFU, number of tracing attempts, who traced the patient, and intervention subtype. We conducted subgroup analyses to explore heterogeneity in results; chi-squared tests for heterogeneity were used to check whether the true effect in all studies is the same. We also quantified the heterogeneity using the I-squared measure.

We assessed the publication bias visually using a funnel plot (the standard normal deviation of intervention effect estimates against its precision) [23] and by the regression-based Egger test for small-study effects [24]. The results are presented in Appendix H in S1 Text. Both funnel plot and Egger test indicated a publication bias for the reengagement program effects outcome (proportion LTFU returned to the original clinic; reengagement program versus no intervention or SOC). The funnel plot for this outcome is asymmetrical, which indicates possible publication bias. This may mean a bias toward more favorable results in the published literature since nonsignificant findings tend disproportionately not to be published [25].

Results

Characteristics of included studies

We found 4,244 records through our search in the 8 databases plus an additional 5 through other sources (Fig 2). We identified 120 records for full-text screening; of these, 37 (6 RCTs and 31 observational) studies met the eligibility criteria, and the other 83 full text articles were excluded for various reasons (Fig 2). All 37 studies (Appendix F in S1 Text) were included in the qualitative assessment and quantitative meta-analysis of proportions of patients returning to care. Studies reported variable metrics of tracing denominators with the majority reporting the number initially considered LTFU (25 studies), the number considered to be out of care after record review (N = 22) and/or the number found to be alive and out of care (N = 21) (Fig 3). Ten studies had an eligible comparator arm (no reengagement intervention or SOC services), these were included in comparative meta-analyses. Most studies were conducted in high-income countries (HICs) (21 studies, including 18 in the United States of America), recruited both male and female participants (36 studies) and included adults exclusively (20 studies). A total of 112,341 PLWH (60% men) participated in the studies. Nineteen studies included men who have sex with men (MSM) (range 13% to 88%), and 15 studies including people who inject drugs (PWID) (range 4% to 23%). The definition of LTFU varied markedly from any missed visit (4 studies) to no visit in 12 months or more (7 studies) but was most commonly characterized as missing clinic appointments (Table 1, Appendix D in S1 Text).

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Fig 3. Variations in tracing numerators and denominators presented in included studies (N = 37 studies).

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Description of reengagement interventions

Reengagement programs conducted a diverse set of activities (Table 2, Appendix D in S1 Text), which varied by setting. Most programs used a combination of text messages, telephone calls, and in-person tracing to identify outcomes among lost patients and reengage those who were out of care. Tracers included peers, social workers, and other healthcare workers. The vast majority contacted and provided encouragement or counseling to those patients encountered who were out of care, but others reported the use of monetary incentives or transportation aid (11 studies), telephone calls (29 studies), letters (11 studies), or emails (7 studies). The number of tracing attempts and the time to initiation of tracing after identification of LTFU status were infrequently reported.

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Table 2. Reengagement intervention implementation characteristics.

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More specifically, in low- and middle-income country (LMIC) settings (16 studies), identification of those LTFU usually involved exploring data from electronic medical record (EMR) datasets combined with paper record chart reviews. Tracing most frequently included a combination of telephone calls and active (in-person) tracing involving a home visit to locate the patient and encourage return. Lack of telephones or incorrect telephone numbers identified in several studies necessitated home visits [26,27]. In-person field tracing frequently required transport subsidies [28], motorcycles [29], or cars and drivers for tracers to travel widely. In this setting, tracing was most commonly conducted by outreach teams including staff trained specifically to conduct outreach termed community health workers, lay health workers, or outreach workers who were frequently peers. Of the 10 LMIC studies that reported on the frequency of tracing attempts, 6 reported more than 3 tracing attempts, though it was variable as to whether these were telephone or in-person/field tracing attempts. The majority of LMIC studies initiated tracing efforts within 3 months of a missed visit, but this ranged from starting on the day of a missed visit to up to 15 months later. Two studies described additional support for reengagement in care after contact; in one case, tracers would accompany patients on their first visit back to the clinic if requested to do so, and in another peer tracers routinely assisted patients with navigation within the clinic during return visits [30].

In high-income country (HIC) settings (21 studies), identification of LTFU similarly involved exploring data from EMR data systems and cross-comparison of EMR data with individual medical records and other clinic record systems to identify those truly disengaged from care. Several studies in this setting additionally matched EMR visit data with other local public health surveillance data to determine if patients had reengaged in care elsewhere, had died, or were imprisoned [28,3133]. Tracing included telephone calls in almost all cases, frequently combined with a letter reminding patients of their missed visit, and in some cases emails. Home visits were less frequent than in LMICs and only reported in 7 studies. In another system used in 3 studies, providers received an alert either through the EMR system or through text message when an identified out-of-care PLWH attended a non-HIV clinical visit in another service, allowing providers to initiate relinkage [10,34,35]. Tracing and the reengagement processes were most commonly conducted by a linkage specialist, case manager, tracer, or patient navigator, essentially staff who were focused on conducting outreach services and supporting patients; this frequently involved both a tracer and a case manager. Additional support for reengagement included transport assistance in the form of transport subsidies or transport provision, assistance with rescheduling clinic appointments, and in one case the additional provision of substance abuse [36] and mental health services [32].

Methodological quality and external validity for comparative analysis

We used the Cochrane ROB-1 tool and the Newcastle–Ottawa tool to assess the risk of bias in RCTs (N = 6) and comparative cohort studies (N = 5). The majority of RCTs were assessed as low risk (N = 3) or of some concern (N = 3). Poor reporting of research methods resulted in an incomplete assessment of several studies (Table 3).

The majority of cohort studies were assessed as good quality after application of risk of bias tools; studies were assessed as fair quality or poor quality primarily due to the use of a historical comparison group, and in a few cases, there was minimal record review or a long lag time prior to tracing resulting in lack of clarity as to whether participants had already returned prior to tracing efforts (Table 4). The risk of bias for the included studies by the reported outcome is presented below. Detailed risk of bias assessments can be found in Appendix B in S1 Text.

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Table 4. Risk of biases in the included cohort studies that had a control group.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003940.t004

Overall, studies were highly pragmatic—conducted in real-world settings (Table 5), with flexible approaches to intervention delivery and few additional measures to trace patients beyond what would occur in routine practice. Several studies were downgraded from highly pragmatic (score of 5) to lower scores due to the organization providing more resources than would be available in a real-world setting or the restriction of those who were traced to a specific subset of those lost (e.g., out of care for <6 months or no pregnant women). Details of PRECIS-2 scores are presented in Appendix C in S1 Text.

Reengagement program outcome: Return to original clinic among all identified as lost-to-follow-up

Overall, 26 studies contributed to the descriptive estimate of the fraction of patients who were identified as LTFU that subsequently returned to the original clinic in settings with any kind of effort to identify and contact those who had not returned as expected to clinic for HIV treatment. Overall, across all studies, 39% (95% CI: 31% to 47%) of all patients who were LTFU in reengagement intervention arms returned to care (Fig 4). There was, however, substantial heterogeneity in the proportion who returned.

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Fig 4. Reengagement program outcome: proportion returned to care among all identified as LTFU (in intervention study arms). LTFU, lost to follow-up.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003940.g004

This heterogeneity persisted in subgroup analyses (Table 6). There appeared to be no large differences in subgroup estimates of the proportion who returned to care by study design, country income level, tracing method, time to tracing, or timing of the outcome measure. There did appear to be slightly higher reengagement in studies where tracing occurred after a minimum of one missed visit (0.48; 95% CI: 0.23 to 0.73) as compared to studies where patients were LTFU for longer periods, particularly those out of care for 12 months or more (0.32; 95% CI: 0.13 to 0.52).

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Table 6. Reengagement program outcome: Proportion of all patients who were LTFU returned to the clinic by subgroups.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003940.t006

In 9 studies (3 observational and 6 randomized) that had a control condition (i.e., SOC or no tracing) (Fig 5), the relative risk of return to care among those traced and found out of care was 1.20 (95% CI: 1.08, 1.32). This effect was stronger in RCTs (RR 1.17, 95% CI: 1.04, 1.31) compared to observational studies (RR 1.36, 95% CI: 0.99, 1.72) and in HIC settings (RR 1.30, 95% CI: 1.16, 1.44) compared to LMICs (RR 1.07, 95% CI: 0.96, 1.19). While the pooled estimate showed effectiveness, these size of effect estimates from individual studies varied substantially (I2 88.5%). One cluster RCT conducted in 24 clinics across 4 provinces in South Africa assessed the effect of an early field tracing intervention integrated into routine clinic practice with minimal oversight and found no evidence of benefit compared to SOC [37]. There was, however, lack of comparability of the intervention and control arms in this study; those who were traced had been out of care for longer period (85 days) compared to controls (29 days). In contrast, a US-based study reporting the highest intervention effect (RR 2.29) included a multistep tracing process, with extensive work done to obtain locating information and the use of both navigators and disease intervention specialists, as well as biweekly case management meetings of staff to address challenges [32].

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Fig 5. Reengagement program effects (proportion LTFU returned to original clinic), reengagement program versus no intervention or SOC.

CI, confidence interval; HIC, high-income country; LMIC, low- and middle-income country; LTFU, lost to follow-up; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SOC, standard of care.

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Heterogeneity of effects persisted within all subgroup analyses, including by risk of bias assessment and implementation characteristics (Appendix E in S1 Text).

Reengagement contact outcome (return to original clinic among those found to be alive and out of care)

Among those who were found to be alive and out of care through reengagement program efforts (17 studies), 58% reengaged in care after being contacted in person or by telephone (95% CI, 51% to 65%) (Fig 6). There was similarly marked heterogeneity in this analysis with return to care ranging from 16% to 94%, making the pooled estimate less relevant to any particular program or setting. Heterogeneity was explored in subgroup analysis; this, however, did not explain heterogeneity (Appendix E in S1 Text).

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Fig 6. Reengagement contact outcome: proportion found alive and out of care who returned to care (in reengagement intervention study arms).

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In 2 studies that had a control condition and evaluated the reengagement contact outcome (Fig 7), return to care was greater among those in the reengagement intervention arm as compared to SOC or not tracing (RR 1.33, 95% CI: 1.31, 1.35).

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Fig 7. Reengagement contact effects: proportion returned to care among patients who were contacted and found out of care in comparative studies.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003940.g007

Retention in care

Overall, the proportion retained among PLWH who were traced and subsequently returned to care at any time after becoming lost to care (range 48% to 64%) was 64% (95% CI: 55 to 73) (Fig 8). This proportion was consistent across subgroups (Appendix E in S1 Text).

Two studies that had a control condition reported comparative estimates; however, due to the variation in the outcome definitions and marked difference in retention estimates, data could not be pooled for comparative assessment. One RCT in South Africa [37] showed no difference in 12-month retention between those who had missed a visit by 5 days or more in the intervention arm compared to the control arm (RR 0.88, 95% CI: 0.75, 1.04). Another cohort study [28] showed better retention (≥2 consecutive visits ≥3 months apart) in the reengagement arm (adjusted RR 2.4, 95% CI: 1.5, 3.9) compared to a historical cohort in the US.

Viral suppression

Overall, viral suppression among PLWH who were traced and subsequently returned to care was 56% (95% CI, 48% to 65%) (Fig 9). As with all analyses, there was substantial heterogeneity of viral suppression rates, which persisted within subgroup analysis by country income, tracing methods, and LTFU definition (Appendix E in S1 Text).

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Fig 9. Proportion virally suppressed after return to care.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003940.g009

One study reported a risk ratio comparing the proportion virally suppressed (among PLWH who were traced and subsequently returned to care) in the reengagement intervention versus a preintervention historical control, showing no difference in viral suppression after return to care RR: 1.60 (95% CI: 0.97 to 2.60) [28].

Mortality

We identified 2 cohort studies that reported mortality after return to care. In one, the 18-month mortality risk among individuals after returning to care was 5% (4/85), compared to 2% (2/117) in a historical cohort (RD 3%, 95% CI: −2, 8%) [27]. In another, the mortality rate was reported as 4% at 1 year, 6% at 2 years, 10% at 3 years, 11% at 4 years, and 14% at 5 years after reengagement among individuals returning to care [38].

GRADE evidence certainty

To establish the overall certainty of the evidence contributing to the pooled comparative estimates, we applied the GRADE framework across 5 domains (Table 7). For the main analysis of the reengagement program effect (return to care at original clinic among all LTFU), there was low certainty that reengagement interventions may improve return to care. This overall program effect was downgraded twice due to marked qualitative and quantitative heterogeneity of reengagement strategy features, contexts, and effect estimates. Data restricted to HIC settings was, however, graded as high certainty evidence as findings within this subgroup were more consistent than those seen in the heterogenous and limited data from LMIC settings. The reengagement contact outcome was assessed in a few studies with the majority of the pooled estimate driven by one observational study resulting in an overall GRADE assessment of very low certainty evidence for this outcome. Details of PRECIS-2 scores are presented in Appendix C on S1 Text.

Discussion

This systematic review, which included 21 studies from HICs and 16 studies from LMICs, found that across settings reengagement programs resulted in 39% of PLWH categorized as LTFU at baseline reengaging in care at their original clinic at any time point. We also found that among those who were truly disengaged (alive and out of care) a higher percentage (58%) returned. Compared to the SOC, reengagement interventions resulted in 20 percentage greater return to care beyond what would have happened in routine practice. Findings were more robust for HIC settings and RCTs, but even within these subgroups, there was substantial heterogeneity of estimates across individual studies; this heterogeneity persisted in subgroup analyses by study design and implementation characteristics. Studies used a variety of methods to establish LTFU status prior to tracing, with most reviewing EMR data and in some cases cross referencing EMR records against other public records such as death registries and prison records. Definitions of LTFU ranged from one or more missed biweekly visits to being out of care for 12 months or longer. Telephone calls combined with field tracing were conducted in the majority of studies; this was, however, more common in LMICs and HICs used more passive approaches after telephone calls, such as email and mail, to contact patients in some instances. Overall studies reported few additional support measures beyond encouraging return to care, with only 4 studies facilitating the return visit with transport vouchers or navigation and one study reporting addressing long-term barriers to retention.

These data suggest that, to enhance the efficiency of reengagement programs, it will be critical for health services to invest in systems to improve recording of transfers and deaths. Across studies, efforts to reengage patients who were out of care invariably started with activities to enumerate those who had not returned as expected and identify (through filtering out transfers and deaths) those who were actually alive and not in care. Many patients who had not returned resulted from undocumented deaths, or unknown transfers to another facility. Therefore, in many cases, those who had “truly disengaged” (were alive and out of care) and who were the true targets of reengagement activities were a relatively small number of the total identified as LTFU (i.e., with unknown outcomes) at baseline, resulting in what appeared to be a low overall return to care by reengagement programs. Reengagement efforts targeted at those truly disengaged showed high return rates. Improving health systems to facilitate transfers and optimize information systems could allow for more targeted reengagement interventions in the future.

In our systemic review, we found that the definition of LTFU varied markedly from any missed visit to no visit in 12 months or more but was most commonly characterized as missing clinic appointments. Harmonizing definitions of LTFU will be beneficial to this field of research or program evaluation. A standardized universal definition(s), such as the one defined as more than 180 days since the last clinical visit [39], could enable us to conduct more reliable systematic review and comparable program evaluation worldwide.

Understanding the optimum intensity and time to initiate reengagement activities remains unclear and is a possible area for future inquiry. Reengagement program effectiveness is highly sensitive to the fact that returns among those defined as LTFU is subject to site-to-site variability in the definition of LTFU. Programs with a low threshold for labeling patients as lost (including many who are simply a little late and likely to return) may falsely appear to have highly effective reengagement programs. It may, however, be inefficient to initiate extensive early tracing processes for those who will return quickly, but at the same time, early tracing interventions could reduce the duration of gaps in care, improving treatment outcomes and reducing community HIV transmission. Across studies, LTFU definitions that triggered reengagement activities varied markedly with tracing occurring within a few days of a missed visit in some studies and more than 1 year later in others. Analyses stratified by LTFU definition, however, did not show any clear benefit of one LTFU definition over another (possibly due to the marked heterogeneity of several other study features), and there was no head-to-head comparisons of early versus late reengagement efforts. Identifying whom to trace at which time point after a missed visit could improve the efficiency and impact of reengagement interventions and could be critical next steps in designing optimum strategies to improve reengagement in care.

In addition to identifying and contacting PLWH who have disengaged from care, supporting reengagement after the return is a further attribute of reengagement interventions that could improve long-term outcomes; i.e., those who disengage may have ongoing barriers to care, which put them at risk for repeated disengagement episodes and poor treatment outcomes. Data from Zambia suggest that among PLWH established on ART who disengage, those with repeated disengagement episodes have higher mortality risk [40]. In this review, there were insufficient studies reporting on retention or viral suppression after return to draw firm conclusions on long-term intervention effects, and only one study reported specifically addressing barriers to care after return. The importance of providing additional reengagement support is gaining importance globally. Medicens Sans Frontiers in South Africa established a “Welcome Service” approach in 2018 aimed at facilitating successful reengagement by reorganizing the triage to streamline services and conducting training to address negative staff attitudes and authoritarian behaviors [41]. However, changing staff attitude to provide specialized services for those patients who returned was a challenge, highlighting that successful reengagement strategies will need to address both individual and health system barriers (including staff attitude) to engagement in care [42].

Limitations

We found marked heterogeneity of intervention characteristics, settings, and outcome reporting; this remained unexplained by subgroup analysis and made pooled estimates less reliable. The majority of included studies had no comparison arm, and, therefore, there were few studies that contributed to estimates of effectiveness. Two included studies from New York [38,43] and two included studies from Malawi [44,45] had the possible risk of overlapping populations as they had some overlapping time of enrollment; we were not able to remove or check the effect of these overlaps in our analysis.

Conclusions

Despite limitations and substantial heterogeneity, our systematic review and meta-analysis of the few studies that had control conditions revealed that reengagement interventions may increase return among PLWH who have disengaged from care and identified several gaps in reengagement services that should be addressed to improve efficiency and effectiveness. First, health systems should consider investing in information systems to improve the recording of deaths and transfers and better characterize LTFU. Second, research exploring varying reengagement strategies for different patient profiles and gaps in care could aid in the development of more targeted and efficient interventions in settings where resource limitations influence the breadth and intensity of available reengagement services. And, lastly, in addition to identifying the best combination of strategies to encourage return, strategies to retain PLWH in care after return should be explored to improve long-term outcomes after return.

Supporting information

S1 Text.

Appendix A. Search Strategies. Appendix B. Risk of bias of included studies. Appendix C. Detailed PRECIS-2 scores. Appendix D. Detailed included studies. Appendix E. Supplementary figures and tables. Appendix F. List of included studies. Appendix G. PRISMA. Appendix H. Publication bias.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003940.s001

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Evans Whitaker (Research Librarian, UCSF Health Sciences Library) who helped with the literature search.

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