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. 2018 Sep 21;13(9):e0204091. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0204091

Table 2. Characteristics of interventions and outcome measurements.

Author (year) Mobile technology Nature of message delivered Duration (months) Delivery frequency Outcome measured Outcome
Randomized control trials
Lester et al. (2010b) SMS check-ins Intervention: SMS check-ins
Control: Usual care
12 Weekly ART adherence measured by self-report
HIV-1 Viral suppression,
Total attrition
Adherence outcome
Adherence to ART was reported in 168 of 273 patients receiving the SMS intervention compared with 132 of 265 in the control group (relative risk[RR] for non-adherence 0.81, 95% CI 0.69–0.94).
Viral load
Suppressed viral loads were reported in 156 of 273 patients in the SMS group and 128 of 265 in the control group, (RR for virologic failure 0.84, 95% CI 0.71–0.99)
Kalichman et al. (2011) Voice Intervention: Behavioral self-regulation counselling phone call.
Control: Usual care.
4 4-biweekly calls ART adherence
Self–efficacy
Adherence measured by Pill count and response to a challenge situation
Adherence outcome
Adherence improved from 87% of pill taken at baseline to 94% adherence 4 months after baseline in the intervention group compared with
Self-efficacy
Behavioural self-management counselling condition demonstrated greater self-efficacy for medication adherence.
Pop-Eleches et al. (2011) SMS Intervention: Short and long simple messages developed in conjunction with clinic staff. Participants specified their preferred languages.
Control: Usual care
12 Daily or weekly interval Adherence and treatment interruptions measured by
MEMS
Adherence outcome
53% of participants receiving weekly SMS reminders achieved adherence of at least 90% during the 48wks of study, compared with 40% of participants in the control group.
Treatment Interruptions
Participants in groups receiving weekly reminders were also significantly less likely to experience treatment interruptions exceeding 48h during the 48-wk. follow-up period than participants in the control group (81 vs 90%)
da Costa et al. (2012) SMS Intervention: The message ‘take good care of your Health’ was chosen by the multidisciplinary team involved in patient care and researchers.
Control: Usual care
12 Weekends and alternate days during the week Adherence >95% (1st to 4th month) measured by:
Self-reported
Pill counting
MEMS
Adherence outcomes
Self-reported: 11 participants (84.62%) remained adherent in the control group vs.8 participants (100%) in the intervention group
Pill counts: 5 participants (38.46%) for the control group and 4 (50.00%) in the intervention group remained compliant
MEMS: 6 participants (46.15%)in the control group and 6 participants (75.00%) in the intervention group remained compliant
Shet et al. (2014) Voice call Intervention: Customized motivational voice call reminders and a pictorial message. Patients chose the sex and language of the pre-recorded message
Control: Usual care
24 Once a week and a weekly reminder after four days of call Adherence measured by pill count Adherence outcome
Comparison of suboptimal adherence was similar between both groups (unadjusted incidence rate ration 1.24, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.65, P = 0.14).
Incidence proportion of patients with suboptimal adherence was 81/300 (27%) in the intervention arm and 65/299 (21.7% in the standard arm
Maduka and Tobin-West (2015) SMS Intervention: Adherence counselling and short message reminders
Control: Usual care
4 Twice a week ART adherence measured by self-report
CD4 count
Adherence outcome
At post-intervention, 76.9% of the intervention group and 55.8% of the control group achieved adherence (χ2 = 5.211, P = 0.022, RR = 0.75 (0.55–0.96).
Median CD4+ cell count of the intervention group increased from 193 cells/ml to 575.0 cells/ml against 131.0cells/ml to 361.5 cells/ml in the control group (P = 0.007)
Belzer et al. (2015) Voice call Intervention: Customized calls with a conversation that included medication review, problem-solving support and scheduling of relevant referrals.
Control: usual care
6 Weekly ART adherence measured by self-report
Viral loads
Adherence outcome
Adherence higher in the intervention group compared to the control group (P = 0.007)
Viral load
Log 10 HIV VL was significantly lower at 24 weeks (2.82 vs 4.52, P = 0.002) and 48 weeks (3.23 vs 4.23, P = 0.043)
Sabin et al. (2015) SMS Intervention: Adherence counselling and SMS phone reminder when Wisepill system fails to open 30minutes after scheduled dose time
Control: usual care
9 30 mins after wise pills fail to detect device opening ART adherence
Viral loads
UDVL rates
Adherence outcome
Mean adherence of 96.2% vs 89.1% (p = 0.003) was recorded for the intervention and control respectively.
Suboptimal adherers: Mean adherence of 93.3% vs 84.7% (p = 0.039) for the intervention and control groups respectively were recorded.
Optimal adherers: Mean adherence of 97.8% vs 91.7% (p = 0.028) for the intervention and control groups respectively.
Huang et al. (2013) Voice calls Intervention: mobile phone conversations consisted of semi-structured dialogue eliciting the reasons and difficulties in making a hospital visit, symptoms and treatment, treatment adherence and difficulty in taking medications.
Control: Usual care
3 months reminder calls made every two weeks Adherence measured by self-report
Viral load
Quality of life measured by WHOQOL-HIV-BREF
Adherence outcome
Treatment-naïve: mean adherence of 99.7 (SD-1.6) and 96.5(SD-17.8) for the intervention and control groups respectively (p = 0.09).
Treatment-experienced: mean adherence of 99.6 (SD-1.0) and 99.5 (SD-2.0) for the intervention and control groups respectively(p = 0.37). CD4 (cell count/mm3 )
Overall viral load significantly decreased, and CD4 count significantly increased from baseline to follow-up.
Quality of life
After 3 months, significant QOL improvements were observed in domains of physical health
(p = 0.003), level of independence (p = 0.018), environment (p = 0.002), and spirituality/religion/personal beliefs (p = 0.021) among treatment-naïve patient
Mbuagaw et al. (2012) SMS Intervention: motivational messages with reminder component and a phone number that patient could call back if they needed help. The content was varied and contemporary. There were 11 messages that were changed weekly
Control: Usual care
6 Once every Wednesday at 9:00 am Adherence to ART measured by Visual analogue scale (VAS)
Quality of life (QOL)

Adherence outcome
No significant effect on adherence was found by:
- VAS>95% (risk ratio [RR] 1.06, 95% [CI] 0.89, 1.29;
- reported missed doses (RR 1.01, 95% CI 0.87, 1.16;
-number of pharmacy refills (mean difference [MD] 0.1, 95% CI: 0.23, 0.43
Haberer et al.(2016) SMS reminder Intervention
Scheduled SMS arm: Scheduled SMS + real-time adherence monitoring
Triggered SMS arm: Triggered SMS + real-time adherence monitoring
Control
Real-time adherence monitoring only Study participants in this arm received no SMS reminders.
9 Scheduled: daily SMS for 1 month, weekly for 2 months
Triggered:
SMS received only if no signal is received in 2 hrs
Adherence measured by Wise pill monitoring technology
HIV RNA suppression
Adherence outcome
Compared to control, adherence was 11.1% higher (P = 0.04), and more than 48-h lapses were less frequent (IRR 0.6, P = 0.02) in the scheduled SMS arm. Adherence and more than 48-lapses were similar in the triggered SMS arm and control
HIV RNA suppression
No difference in HIV RNA was seen
Quasi–experimental time series/ prospective studies
Rodrigues et al. (2012) Interactive voice response (IVR)
Non- interactive neutral picture SMS
Two reminders (interactive calls and non-interactive neutral short SMS) 6 Weekly ART adherence measured by pill count Adherence outcome
The proportion of participants with optimal adherence increased from 85% to 91% during the intervention period, an effect that was maintained 6 months after the intervention was discontinued
Dowshen et al. (2012) SMS Personalized SMS reminders 6 Daily Adherence measured by Visual analogue scale
CD4 cell count
Viral load monitoring
Adherence outcomes
Participants increased from a baseline value of 74.7 on the VAS to 93.1 at the 24-week follow-ups.
Viral load suppression
No significant difference in CD4 cell count or viral load between baseline and 12- or 24-week
follow-up

SMS, short message service; ART, antiretroviral therapy

MEMS, Medication event monitoring system

UDVL, Undetected viral load levels

WHOQOL-HIV BREF, World Health Organization Quality of Life in HIV-infected Person instrument

VAS, Visual analogue scale