| Literature DB >> 22802738 |
Wim Delva1, Jeffrey W Eaton, Fei Meng, Christophe Fraser, Richard G White, Peter Vickerman, Marie-Claude Boily, Timothy B Hallett.
Abstract
Until now, decisions about how to allocate ART have largely been based on maximising the therapeutic benefit of ART for patients. Since the results of the HPTN 052 study showed efficacy of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in preventing HIV transmission, there has been increased interest in the benefits of ART not only as treatment, but also in prevention. Resources for expanding ART in the short term may be limited, so the question is how to generate the most prevention benefit from realistic potential increases in the availability of ART. Although not a formal systematic review, here we review different ways in which access to ART could be expanded by prioritising access to particular groups based on clinical or behavioural factors. For each group we consider (i) the clinical and epidemiological benefits, (ii) the potential feasibility, acceptability, and equity, and (iii) the affordability and cost-effectiveness of prioritising ART access for that group. In re-evaluating the allocation of ART in light of the new data about ART preventing transmission, the goal should be to create policies that maximise epidemiological and clinical benefit while still being feasible, affordable, acceptable, and equitable.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22802738 PMCID: PMC3393661 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Figure 1HIV transmission and mortality by CD4 count.
(A) HIV transmission rate per 100 person-years (PYs) by CD4 count for the infected partner in discordant couples enrolled in a randomized controlled trial of acyclovir [11]. (B) Mortality rate by CD4 category in ART-naïve HIV-positive individuals enrolled in research cohorts in West Africa [132]. In both panels, the width of the bars represents the proportion of ART-naïve HIV-positive 15- to 64-year-olds by CD4 count in a nationally representative household survey in Kenya [15].
Figure 2The transmission potential of individuals as a function of set-point viral load.
(A) Infectiousness (per unit calendar time) and (B) duration of asymptomatic infection are estimated by fitting to various sources of data as described in [24]. (C) The product of these is the transmission potential, the average number of people an infected individual is expected to infect over the whole of asymptomatic infection. The transmission potential measures the relative prevention effect of treatment as prevention targeted to an individual with a given SPVL. Adapted from Fraser et al. [24].
Likely profile of prevention and clinical impact, affordability, feasibility, and acceptability of alternative options for ART expansion beyond current guidelines.
| Prioritisation Group | Impact on New HIV Infections | Impact on HIV-Related Morbidity and Mortality | Feasibility | Affordability | Acceptability |
| CD4 cell count (350–500 cells/µl) | − (Unlikely to be highly transmissible, relative to those at lower CD4 cell counts or other prioritisation groups) | ? (Clinical trial evidence expected from START trial, reporting in 2015; unlikely to be as efficient as strategies targeting clinical need, e.g., high SPVL, TB coinfection) | + (Screening utilises already standard CD4 screening; reaching high coverage would likely require efforts to improve routine HIV testing at the population level) | − (Would likely expand access to treatment to an additional 20% of the HIV-infected populations) | + (May be perceived as the most equitable option for expanding access to ART, because of the history of determining treatment need and access based on CD4 cell count) |
| Viral load (SPVL≥50,000 copies/ml) | • (Strong evidence from many discordant studies that infectiousness increases with SPVL, but not dramatically) | + (Strong evidence from many seroconverter cohorts that individuals with high SPVL progress rapidly to AIDS, and so may enhance linkage to care in rapid progressors) | ? (Requires development of point-of-care viral load testing; many prototypes, but none validated yet) | ? (Cost of point-of-care viral load testing is unknown) | ? (May prove controversial if not backed by evidence for direct clinical benefit) |
| Active TB disease | − (Likely to have the same impact on HIV transmission as reaching a subset of HIV-infected individuals with CD4 cell counts between 350 and 500 cells/µl) | + (Much greater impact on morbidity and mortality than treating many other groups) | + (Can be integrated with existing TB services; adherence/retention to ART may be higher because of current illness and the prospect of a reduced risk of TB recurrence) | + (Relatively small group, compared with individuals with CD4 350–500 cells/µl; large reduction in mortality suggests targeting TB patients may be more cost-effective than other groups) | + (Given the clear clinical need, likely to be highly acceptable to both the target group and the general population) |
| Pregnant women | ? (Potential reductions in maternal orphanhood and potential to prevent paediatric HIV transmission; estimates of the impact on heterosexual HIV transmission are yet to be produced) | + (Impact mainly on morbidity and mortality of newborns with HIV-positive mothers) | + (Targets are easy to identify via existing ANC; testing uptake is high in some areas and can be increased by provider-initiated service; contrary results are found on retention) | + (Increment of newly identified target patients is not big; infrastructures and staff that already exist favours the affordability) | + (May be better accepted by patients if initiated by ANC provider) |
| Serodiscordant couples | − (Likely fewer infections averted per person-year of ART than allocation to those with multiple partners) | ? (Marginal therapeutic benefit of ART initiation at CD4 >350 cells/µl not certain) | + (In some settings couples hard to find; trial data indicate discordant couples are a highly motivated population with good adherence to pill-taking regimes and retention in care) | ? (Minority of infected individuals in stable discordant couples, but uptake unknown) | ? (Unclear if it is socially acceptable for those with stable partners to receive preferential access) |
| Sex workers | + (Elevated HIV transmission risk in many settings likely to result in large number of HIV infections averted per year on ART) | ? (May be more modest than other groups because limited data suggest that they have lower adherence and worse outcomes in terms of morbidity and mortality) | + (Previous FSW-targeted interventions have demonstrated feasibility; limited studies suggest FSWs are willing to initiate ART; however, likely to have worse adherence and retention) | + (FSWs make up a small proportion of the female population, but if sex work is of short duration, then there may be a much larger group of ex-FSWs that will continue on ART) | ? (May not be acceptable to the wider community; programmes would need to show and emphasise population benefit) |
?, insufficient evidence to warrant definitive decision; +, available evidence suggests this is a beneficial option, compared to the other expansion options; −, available evidence suggests this is an unfavourable option, compared to the other expansion options; •, available evidence supports neither that this is a beneficial option nor that it is an unfavourable option.