Objectives: To identify and examine the methodologic issues
related to evaluating the effectiveness of treatment adherence to
clinical guidelines. The example of antiretroviral therapy guidelines
for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease is used to illustrate
the points.
Methods: Regression analysis was applied to observational HIV clinic data
for patients with CD4+ cell counts less than 500 per μL and greater
than 50 per μL at baseline (n = 704),using Cox proportional hazards
time-varying covariates models controlling for baseline risk. The
results are compared with simpler models (Cox model [without
time-varying covariates] and logistic regression). In addition, the
effect of including a measure of exposure to antiretroviral
guidelines in the model is explored.
Results: This study has three implications for modeling
clinical guideline effectiveness. To capture events that are
time-sensitive, a duration model should be used, and covariates that are
time-varying should be modeled as time-varying. Thirdly,
incorporating a threshold measure of exposure to reflect the minimum
period of time for guideline adherence required for a measurable
effect on patient outcome should be considered.
Conclusions: The methods proposed in this paper are important
to consider if guidelines are to evolve from being a tool for
summarizing and transferring the results of research from the
literature to clinicians into a practical tool that influences
clinical practice patterns. However, the methodology tested in this
study needs to be validated using additional data on similar patients
and using data on patients with other diseases.