| Literature DB >> 22992315 |
April D Kimmel1, Stephen C Resch, Xavier Anglaret, Norman Daniels, Sue J Goldie, Christine Danel, Angela Y Wong, Kenneth A Freedberg, Milton C Weinstein.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In resource-limited settings, HIV budgets are flattening or decreasing. A policy of discontinuing antiretroviral therapy (ART) after HIV treatment failure was modeled to highlight trade-offs among competing policy goals of optimizing individual and population health outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22992315 PMCID: PMC3502124 DOI: 10.1186/1478-7547-10-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Selected data for the individual-level model
| Initial cohort characteristics | ||
| Mean age (SD) (yrs) | 36.9 (9.2) | Touré et al.
[ |
| Gender distribution | 70% female | Touré et al.
[ |
| Mean CD4 count (SD) (cells/μL) | 140 (116) | Touré et al.
[ |
| Median HIV RNA (IQR) (log10 copies/mL) | 5.3 (4.8–5.8) | Seyler et al.
[ |
| First- and second-line antiretroviral efficacy | ||
| HIV RNA suppression at 24 weeks | 80.2% | Messou et al.
[ |
| CD4 count increase at 24 weeks (cells/μL)† | +152 | Messou et al.
[ |
| Probability of discordant response | 5% | Grabar et al.
[ |
| Loss to follow-up | ||
| 18-month cumulative loss to follow-up | 15% | Touré et al.
[ |
| Probability of returning to care if WHO stage IV event | 50% | Assumption |
SD standard deviation, WHO World Health Organization, NNRTI non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, PI protease inhibitor, IQR interquartile range.
*First-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) efficacy data were derived from the ACONDA cohort, in which 52% received an initial ART regimen of stavudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine; 22% received stavudine, lamivudine, and efavirenz; and 20% received zidovudine, lamivudine, and efavirenz (with the remaining 6% receiving other regimens). We assumed a dosing scheduled in accordance with WHO recommendations — 300 mg once daily (zidovudine), 150 mg twice daily (lamivudine), 30 mg twice daily (stavudine), 600 mg once daily (efavirenz), and 200 mg once daily (nevirapine). In the absence of data, we assumed that second-line ART suppression rates were identical to that for first-line ART.
†For first-line ART, CD4 count increases were 76 (standard deviation (SD) 19) cells/μL per month for months 1–2 and 4 (SD 1) cells/μL per month thereafter. We assumed similar CD4 response for second-line ART.
Base case results: individual- and population-level antiretroviral health benefits in a setting with inadequate treatment availability
| | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Status Quo | 8.8 | 7.4 | 5,880 | 3.6 | 540,000 | 24.4 |
| Alternative | 8.1 | 6.3 | 6,980 | 3.7 | 555,000 | 29.0 |
*In the Status Quo, antiretroviral therapy (ART) is never discontinued. In the Alternative strategy, ART is discontinued when second-line ART failure is observed. In the base case, ART failure is defined as a 50% decrease in peak on-treatment CD4 count, CD4 count <100 cells/μL, CD4 count below pre-ART nadir, or a WHO stage III/IV event, excluding tuberculosis and severe bacterial infections [6]. On average, individuals who received no treatment lived approximately 1.9 years.
†Results are presented for a 5-year analytic time horizon for a cohort of 30,000 newly detected HIV-infected individuals entering care annually.
‡Treatment coverage is defined as the ratio of the number receiving treatment annually to the number qualifying for treatment annually.
Figure 1Survival, by strategy, for a single cohort of treated individuals only (Upper Panel) and a single cohort of both treated and untreated individuals (Lower Panel) when treatment slots are limited to 50,000. On the x-axis is time; on the y-axis is the proportion alive. By 5 years, survival among a single cohort of treated individuals in the Status Quo exceeds survival among treated individuals in the Alternative strategy. In contrast, for a single cohort of treated and untreated individuals followed over 5 years, survival under the Alternative strategy exceeds survival under the Status Quo.
Figure 2Sensitivity analysis: percent difference of the Alternative strategy compared to the Status Quo for two health outcomes. Variation in health outcomes is shown on the horizontal axis and results from changes in select individual-level model parameters, which are listed on the vertical axis. To the left of the origin (i.e., 0%) is the percent difference of the Alternative strategy compared to the Status Quo regarding mean time on treatment among treated individuals (dark purple) and life expectancy of treated individuals (light purple). To the right of the origin is the percent difference of the Alternative strategy compared to the Status Quo regarding the mean number initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) annually (dark green) and life expectancy of both treated and untreated individuals (light green). “+HIV RNA monitoring” refers to the addition of both HIV RNA monitoring to base case assumptions. “↑ Discordant response” indicates an increase in the fraction of discordant responses to ART (i.e., no immunologic response to ART among those virologically suppressed) from 5% to 19.1%. “ART effect” refers to the independent effect of ART on AIDS-related mortality. The percent difference in life expectancy among treated and untreated individuals for the Alternative strategy compared to the Status Quo is less than among treated individuals only, a sub-population in this analysis. Therefore, the percent difference in life expectancy at the population level serves as a conservative estimate of the public health benefit of the Alternative strategy. ART: antiretroviral therapy; LTFU: loss to follow-up; LE: life expectancy.
Figure 3Sensitivity analysis: impact of increasing treatment capacity over time. This figure illustrates the impact on two health outcomes of increasing treatment capacity over time, while holding the incidence of newly detected patients constant. On the horizontal axis is the annual increase in the number of treatment “slots”. Variation in the number of additional treatment slots annually impacts life expectancy per cohort (left vertical axis) and the mean number initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) annually (right vertical axis). Below an annual increase of approximately 4,000 treatment slots, life expectancy per cohort under the Alternative strategy (dashed line) exceeds life expectancy per cohort under the Status Quo (solid line). Above this threshold, the relationship reverses and life expectancy per cohort under the Status Quo exceeds that under the Alternative strategy. In contrast, regardless of the annual increase in treatment capacity, the mean number initiating ART annually under the Alternative strategy (orange) always is greater than the mean number initiating ART annually under the Status Quo (blue). However, the difference in the mean number initiating ART annually between the two strategies begins to decrease when treatment capacity exceeds 62,000 treatment slots, or an approximate 25% increase, at any one time.