Background: The aim of this study was to assess the habits of hospital and community-based physicians involved in the management of HIV-infected patients and to measure the gap between their practice and follow-up guidelines.
Method: The guidelines considered as reference were the 1998 Dormont report. Data were prospectively collected from the medical files of the first 10 HIV-infected patients who presented for an out-patient visit (laboratory tests at initial consultation, type and frequency of follow-up during the previous year, relation between biological data and treatment strategy).
Results: 22 physicians (14 hospital-based physicians (HP) and 8 community-based general practitioners (GP) participated in the survey. Initial biological data were available for 211 patients; 45% had tests strictly conforming to the recommendations (HP: 57%, GP 23%; p<0.001). Among patients followed by a GP, the initial biological assessment was adequate in 7% of cases when an opiate substitute was prescribed versus 33% in the absence of opiate substitute prescription (p=0.05). For all patients, syphilis serology was the test most frequently lacking (38%). Among 78 patients with HIV-RNA levels>5,000 copies/ml, 18% did not benefit from a change in treatment. Among the patients treated by a GP, 15% had a three-fold increase in HIV-RNA, compared to their initial measurement. Of these, 3/4 were redirected to a hospital out-patient unit.
Conclusion: This study highlights the discrepancy between initial laboratory testing and expert recommendations, particularly concerning patients attended by a GP. Improvement in data collection is essential. However, recommendations concerning patients' biological follow-up are applied, with the exception of the delay between the initial prescription or treatment modification and HIV-RNA measurement, which should be shortened.