| Literature DB >> 25756498 |
Andrea L Ciaranello1, Landon Myer2, Kathleen Kelly3, Sarah Christensen3, Kristen Daskilewicz2, Katie Doherty3, Linda-Gail Bekker4, Taige Hou5, Robin Wood4, Jordan A Francke3, Kara Wools-Kaloustian6, Kenneth A Freedberg7, Rochelle P Walensky8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) programs currently prioritize antiretroviral therapy (ART) for women with advanced HIV. Point-of-care (POC) CD4 assays may expedite the selection of three-drug ART instead of zidovudine, but are costlier than traditional laboratory assays.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25756498 PMCID: PMC4355621 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0117751
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Selected model input parameters for the base-case analysis (See S1 Table for complete list and ranges evaluated in sensitivity analyses).
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| Age (mean (SD), years) | 26(5) | [ | ||||
| Mortality during pregnancy | 0.26% | [ | ||||
| Proportion with CD4 <350/μL | 44% | [ | ||||
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| Laboratory CD4 testing (base case) | 96% | 87% | 83% | 100% | 100% | [ |
| Laboratory CD4 ladling (low-access) | 30% | 50% | 15% | 100% | 100% | [ |
| POC CD4 testing | 99% | 95% | 94% | 93% | 86% | [ |
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| CD4 <350/μL at conception | 0.136 | 0.033 | [ | |||
| CD4 >350/μL at conception | 0.036 | 0.01 | [ | |||
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| CD4 <350/μL | n/a | 4.0 | [ | |||
| CD4 >350/μL | 2.7 | 2.2 | [ | |||
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| CD4 assay | Lab: $14/POC: $26 | Lab[ | ||||
| CD4 result return (10 min of nurse time to locate and file result) | Lab: $1/POC: $0 | Assumption (nurse time x salary)[ | ||||
| Antenatal AZT | $23 | [ | ||||
| Antenatal TDF/3TC/EFV | Lab: $36/POC: $40 | [ | ||||
| Postnatal maternal ART | ||||||
| 1st-line(TDF/FTC/EFV) | $13 | [ | ||||
| 2nd-line (AZT/3TC/LPV/r) | $41 | [ | ||||
| Pediatric ART (cost varies by age) | ||||||
| 1st-line (ABC/3TC/LPV/r) | $25-$41 | [ | ||||
| 2nd-line (AZT/3TC/NVP) | $6-$15 | [ | ||||
| Antenatal care | ||||||
| Routine antenatal care (4 visits) | $200 | Assumption | ||||
| Delivery costs (healthcare facility) | $60 | [ | ||||
| Urgent health care costs: Children | ||||||
| Care for acute opportunistic infections (per event) | ||||||
| WHO stage Ill | $1,240 | [ | ||||
| WHO stage IV | $2,180 | [ | ||||
| Tuberculosis | $1,650 | [ | ||||
| Urgent health care costs: Mothers |
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| Care for acute opportunistic infections | ||||||
| WHO stage III-IV disease (range by specific disease) | 2.7–3.4 | 1.3–2.9 | $465–875 | [ | ||
| Bacterial Infection | 2.8 | 2.4 | $825 | [ | ||
| Mild fungal infection | 1.2 | 2.3 | $390 | [ | ||
| Tuberculosis | 2.9 | 2.2 | $830 | [ | ||
| Routine HIV care costs (per month): Mothers and children |
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| CD4 <500/μL (<35%) | 0.03 | 0,30 | $20 | [ | ||
| CD4 351–500/μL (25–35%) | 0.06 | 0.27 | $30 | [ | ||
| CD4 201–350/μL (20–25%) | 0.08 | 0.26 | $35 | [ | ||
| CD4 101–200/μL (15–20%) | 0,22 | 0.29 | $75 | [ | ||
| CD4 51–100/μL (5–15%) | 0.22 | 0.29 | $75 | [ | ||
| CD4 μ50/μL (0–5%) | 0.56 | 0.52 | $170 | [ | ||
| Terminal care, last month of life: mothers and children | 2.39 | 0.77 | $655 | [ | ||
SD: Standard deviation; ART: antiretroviral therapy; PMTCT: prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission; AZT: azidothymidine (zidovudine); ARV: antiretroviral; NVP: nevirapine; ABC: abacavir; 3TC: lamivudine; LPV/r: lopinavir/ritonavir; TDF: tenofovir; FTC: emtricitabine; EFV: efavirenz; WHO: World Health Organization
a. Sensitivity and specificity were modeled with regard to true CD4 value of ≤350/μL (sensitivity: assay reports CD4 ≤350/μL when true CD4 is ≤350/μL; specificity: assay reports CD4 >350/μL when true CD4 is >350/μL). To be conservative with regard to the benefit of POC, we assumed in the base case that laboratory CD4 had 100% sensitivity and specificity to detect true CD4 ≤350/μL.
b. In the base-case analysis, 13 weeks of antentatal AZT for non-ART eligible women are assumed in both strategies, based on median gestational age at booking in South Africa of 26 weeks. For ART-eligible women, 13 weeks of ART are assumed in the POC strategy and 3 weeks of AZT and 10 weeks of ART are assumed in the laboratory strategy.
c. Please see S1 Table for description of assumptions of outpatient healthcare resource utilization.
Fig 1Model structure.
This figure shows the modeled sequence of events during antenatal care that determine a mother’s prescribed PMTCT drug regimen. During the first visit, all women receive an HIV test and HIV test results. In the current analysis, all women who are HIV-infected are assumed to have positive HIV test results and enter the MTCT model, at which point they are assigned a probability of undergoing a CD4 test and, if tested, a probability of receiving their CD4 test results. Women are also modeled to be eligible for ART (true CD4 ≤350/μL) or non-eligible for ART (true CD4 >350/μL) based on 2010 WHO guidelines. The sensitivity and specificity of the CD4 assays are reflected in assigned probabilities that the CD4 test will indicate women to be eligible or non-eligible for ART. The observed CD4 results then determine whether women receive AZT or ART for PMTCT. Transmission probabilities and maternal outcomes depend on true CD4 count and PMTCT regimen received. Abbreviations: ANC: antenatal care; POC: point-of-care testing; ART: three-drug antiretroviral therapy; AZT: zidovudine.
Base-case results: projected outcomes for point-of-care and laboratory-based CD4 testing in antenatal care in South Africa.
| CD4 testing strategy | MTCT at birth | MTCT at 6 months | ANC costs |
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| Life expectancy (years) | Lifetime cost (US$) | Life expectancy (years) | Lifetime cost (US$) | Life expectancy (years) | Lifetime cost (US$) | |||||
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| 3.8% | 5.3% | 325 | 53.35 (23.56) | 710 (480) | 21.15 (14.78) | 23,860 (15,440) | 74.50 (38.34) | 24,900 (16,250) | |
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| 4.2% | 5.7% | 310 | 53.18 (23.50) | 760 (520) | 21.15 (14.78) | 23,860 (15,440) | 74.33 (38.28) | 24,930 (16,270) | Dominated |
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| 7.3% | 8.7% | 295 | 51.93 (23.05) | 1,180 (810) | 21.14 (14.77) | 23,850 (15,430) | 73.07 (37.82) | 25,330 (16,540) | Dominated |
MTCT: mother-to-child transmission; ANC: antenatal care (costs accrued during pregnancy and delivery); POC: point-of-care CD4 testing strategy.
*compared to POC
a. Undiscounted life expectancies and costs are shown without parentheses. Life expectancy and cost projections were also discounted at a rate of 3% per year, shown in parentheses. ANC costs were not discounted, because they accrued in the first year of the simulation. All costs are in 2013 USD. Projections are shown for a cohort of HIV-infected mothers after delivery, and for a cohort of their infants from birth (most of whom are HIV-uninfected).
b. Laboratory testing strategies were dominated, meaning that they were more expensive (higher total ANC+maternal+pediatric costs) and less effective (lower total maternal+pediatric life expectancy) than the POC testing strategy.
c. POC results remain unchanged in the low laboratory access scenario.
Fig 2Univariate sensitivity analyses: Pediatric life expectancy.
Undiscounted pediatric life expectancies for laboratory and POC testing are shown (maternal life expectancies do not differ substantially by testing strategy, and so are excluded from the figure). POC “test and result return” is defined as the product of (proportion of HIV-identified women undergoing CD4 testing) * (proportion of CD4-tested women receiving CD4 results). For POC sensitivity and POC “test and result return,” life expectancies are shown at the threshold values at which POC testing no longer results in a higher life expectancy compared to laboratory testing. For POC specificity, life expectancy increases as specificity decreases, so no such threshold exists; results are shown at 50%, 80%, and 100%, as examples. The horizontal dotted line shows the undiscounted pediatric life expectancy under the base case laboratory conditions. Left panel: base case; middle panel: low laboratory access scenario; right panel: sensitivity analyses on POC parameters. Abbreviations: POC: point-of-care testing.
Fig 3Multivariate sensitivity analyses: Cost-effectiveness of POC CD4 testing compared to laboratory testing.
The cost-effectiveness of POC CD4 testing compared to laboratory testing is shown for key combinations of POC CD4 assay cost, POC assay sensitivity, and POC CD4 test and result return rates, defined as the product of (proportion of HIV-identified women undergoing CD4 testing) * (proportion of CD4-tested women receiving CD4 results). Abbreviations: POC: point-of-care testing.
Fig 4Budget impact analysis.
Antenatal and pediatric care costs are shown for the first five years after birth. We include the POC and laboratory base case strategies, as well as the low laboratory access scenario. The arrows indicate the time points at which the upfront higher costs of POC testing are recovered due to savings in pediatric care costs. The open arrow indicates that POC becomes cost-saving compared to “low-access” laboratory testing within six months of delivery; the closed arrow indicates that POC becomes cost-saving compared to the base-case laboratory testing strategy within 36 months after delivery. Costs over the first five years after birth are further detailed in S4 Table. Maternal costs were nearly equivalent for both strategies, and are not shown. The sharp inflection point in costs at 6 months after delivery represents the cessation of breastfeeding the associated costs for infant nevirapine for postnatal MTCT prophylaxis. Abbreviations: POC: point-of-care testing; ANC: antenatal.