| Literature DB >> 27159260 |
John Stover1, Lori Bollinger1, Jose Antonio Izazola2, Luiz Loures2, Paul DeLay3, Peter D Ghys2.
Abstract
In 2011 a new Investment Framework was proposed that described how the scale-up of key HIV interventions could dramatically reduce new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths in low and middle income countries by 2015. This framework included ambitious coverage goals for prevention and treatment services for 2015, resulting in a reduction of new HIV infections by more than half, in line with the goals of the declaration of the UN High Level Meeting in June 2011. However, the approach suggested a leveling in the number of new infections at about 1 million annually-far from the UNAIDS goal of ending AIDS by 2030. In response, UNAIDS has developed the Fast-Track approach that is intended to provide a roadmap to the actions required to achieve this goal. The Fast-Track approach is predicated on a rapid scale-up of focused, effective prevention and treatment services over the next 5 years and then maintaining a high level of programme implementation until 2030. Fast-Track aims to reduce new infections and AIDS-related deaths by 90% from 2010 to 2030 and proposes a set of biomedical, behavioral and enabling intervention targets for 2020 and 2030 to achieve that goal, including the rapid scale-up initiative for antiretroviral treatment known as 90-90-90. Compared to a counterfactual scenario of constant coverage for all services at early-2015 levels, the Fast-Track approach would avert 18 million HIV infections and 11 million deaths from 2016 to 2030 globally. This paper describes the analysis that produced these targets and the estimated resources needed to achieve them in low- and middle-income countries. It indicates that it is possible to achieve these goals with a significant push to achieve rapid scale-up of key interventions between now and 2020. The annual resources required from all sources would rise to US$7.4Bn in low-income countries, US$8.2Bn in lower middle-income countries and US$10.5Bn in upper-middle-income-countries by 2020 before declining approximately 9% by 2030.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27159260 PMCID: PMC4861332 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0154893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Coverage goals and effects for the interventions included in this analysis.
| Intervention | 2020 Coverage | 2030 Coverage | Effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Service package for female sex workers | 90% | 90% | 90% condom use at last sex act |
| Service package for MSM | 90% | 90% | 90% condom use at last sex act |
| Service package for transgender populations | 90% | 90% | 90% condom use at last sex act |
| Service package for PWID | 90% | 90% | 90% condom use at last sex act, 51% reduction in percentage sharing needles |
| Opioid substitution therapy for PWID | 40% | 40% | 46% reduction in number of sexual partners, 71% reduction in needle sharing |
| Service package for prisoners | 90% | 90% | Increased condom use in prisons |
| Condom promotion | 90% condom use at last sex | 90% condom use at last sex | 90% condom use at last sex among people with multiple partners |
| Cash transfers for girls | 30% In Hyper-endemic countries with low rates of secondary school enrollment | 50% In Hyper-endemic countries with low rates of secondary school enrollment | 40% reduction in incidence among young women and girls (15–24 years old) in areas with low rates of secondary enrollment [ |
| PMTCT | 95% | 95% | 80% starting ART before current pregnancy, 15% starting during current pregnancy. 98% reduction in perinatal transmission, 87% reduction in transmission during breastfeeding [ |
| Male circumcision | 90% of 10–29 year old men in countries with generalized epidemics and low MC rate | 90% of 10–29 year old men in countries with generalized epidemics and low MC rate | 60% reduction in susceptibility [ |
| Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) | 80% | 80% | Provided to rape victims and health workers experiencing accidental exposure |
| PrEP for sero-discordant couples | 10% in generalized and hyper-endemic countries | 30% in generalized and hyper-endemic countries | 80% reduction in susceptibility for sero-discordant couples. PrEP includes oral pills, vaginal gel, vaginal ring and injectable forms. [ |
| PrEP for sexually active females 15–24 in areas with incidence above 3% in this population group | 10% in hyper-endemic countries | 30% in hyper-endemic countries | 80% reduction in susceptibility. For adolescent females we assume half this effect through 2020 then the full effect after 2020. PrEP includes oral pills, vaginal gel, vaginal ring and injectable forms. [ |
| Testing | 24% of all adults and children in countries with generalized epidemics and of key populations and people with multiple partners in countries with concentrated epidemics | Gradual decrease to 20% of key populations, those with multiple partners and pregnant women in all countries with incidence below 0.1%. 20% of adults and children in countries with incidence above 0.1% | Identify HIV+ for linkage to care |
| Pre-ART care | 81% of PLHIV not on ART | 90% of PLHIV not on ART | |
| Adult ART | 81% (90% started, 90% retained) | 90% (95% started, 95% retained) | Eligibility for treatment expands to all PLHIV by 2018. 95% reduction in infectiousness among those virally suppressed [ |
| Includes community mobilization |
1 Hyper-endemic countries are: Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
2 Countries include Botswana, Ethiopia (Gambela only), Kenya (Nyanza only), Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa, South Sudan, Swaziland, United Republic of Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
3 Community mobilization can be divided into three categories: Outreach and peer communication and engagement activities; support activities; and advocacy, transparency and accountability. Community mobilization can be supported through community system strengthening which is a systematic approach to promote the development of informed, capable and coordinated communities and community based organizations. Hallmarks of effective community system strengthening include the involvement of a broad range of community actors and enabling them to contribute as equal partners alongside other actors to the long term sustainability of health and other interventions at community level. Community system strengthening aims to improve health outcomes by developing the role of key affected populations, communities and community based organizations in the design, delivery, monitoring and evaluation of services, activities and programs.
4 Media communication utilizes one or more channels to transmit a specific message to a large audience. Examples include brochures, billboards, posters, newspaper or magazine articles, comic books, television, radio, music videos, Internet, cell phones, songs, dramas, traditional and folk media, and interactive theatre. Media communication includes development of communication messages and materials and their transmission. Media communication seeks to promote positive changes in cognitive and behavioural outcomes such as increasing knowledge of modes of HIV transmission, increasing perceived risk of contracting HIV, reducing high-risk sexual behaviours such as having multiple partners, increasing positive protective behaviours such as condom use, and increasing the utilization of health care services. Media communication can also be utilized to create a supportive environment and often targets social, cultural and gender norms that may hinder behaviour change.
Regional average costs per person reached (in 2015 USD $).
| Intervention | Asia and Pacific | East and Southern Africa | Eastern Europe & Central Asia | Latin America | Middle East North Africa | West and Central Africa | West and Central Europe and North America | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Service package for female sex workers | $ 77 | $94 | $108 | $30 | $15 | $53 | $180 | 1,5 |
| Service package for MSM | $45 | $101 | $45 | $44 | $105 | $51 | $42 | 5 |
| Service package for transgender populations | $45 | $101 | $45 | $44 | $105 | $51 | $42 | 5 |
| Service package for PWID | $162 | $135 | $123 | $49 | $69 | $90 | $113 | 5 |
| Opioid substitution therapy for PWID | $363 | $265 | $664 | $664 | $236 | $265 | $1,190 | 2 |
| Service package for prisoners | $38 | $31 | $14 | $10 | $29 | $1 | $5 | |
| PMTCT | $984 | $365 | $2,472 | $1,967 | $274 | $585 | $2,204 | 3 |
| Voluntary medical male circumcision | $85 | |||||||
| Post-exposure prophylaxis | $100 | $40 | $101 | $134 | $137 | $40 | $101 | |
| Pre-exposure prophylaxis | $200 | $200 | $200 | $200 | $200 | $200 | $200 | |
| Condom promotion and supply | $0.12 | $0.26 | $0.27 | $0.31 | $0.29 | $0.26 | $0.27 | |
| Cash transfers for girls | $240 | 4 | ||||||
| HIV testing services | $2 | $9 | $2 | $2 | $2 | $8 | $2 | |
| Community mobilization | $2 | $4 | $2 | $6 | $2 | $2 | $2 |
All unit costs are expressed as the annual cost per person reached, except condoms are the cost per condom distributed.
Notes
1. Includes $5.92 for activities to prevent gender-based violence and assumes that 5% of condoms used are female condoms
2. We assume that 100% of costs are funded by AIDS budgets through 2020 declining to 30% by 2030.
3. The costs of PMTCT prophylaxis are shifted to the ART line item as Option B+ expands, leaving 10% of current cost by 2030 to cover the costs of syrup for the infants and nevirapine for those presenting too late to start ART.
4. 100% funded from AIDS budgets through 2020 declining to 30% by 2030
5. Unit costs decline by 2030 due to economies of scale by 16% for female sex workers, 19% for MSM and transgenders, 8% for PWID
Current cost per patient per year for ART and pre-ART services.
(2015 USD$).
| Region | Service Delivery | Labs | ARVs—1st line | ARVs—2nd line | Pre-ART |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern Europe and Central Asia | $ 2,130 | $ 255 | $ 148 | $ 684 | $ 1,124 |
| East Asia and Pacific | $ 109 | $ 308 | $ 136 | $ 547 | $ 444 |
| Latin America and Caribbean | $ 1,725 | $ 207 | $ 634 | $ 1,250 | $ 910 |
| Middle East and North Africa | $ 1,198 | $ 144 | $ 136 | $ 328 | $ 632 |
| South and South-East Asia | $ 27 | $ 140 | $ 148 | $ 400 | $ 96 |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | $ 222 | $ 71 | $ 136 | $ 332 | $ 182 |
| Number of countries which contributed data | 17 | 16 | 24 | 15 | 11 |
Notes:
These are costs in 2015 or latest year available.
Pre-ART costs largely disappear by 2020 as people would be started on ART as soon as they are identified as living with HIV; costs were kept constant.
Future costs of antiretroviral treatment, for different categories of patients, by region.
| Region | New Patients | Stable Patients | Patients not Virally Suppressed | Pregnant Women (Incremental Costs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asia and Pacific | 2020: $378 | 2020: $261 | 2020: $340 | 2020: $111 |
| 2030: $341 | 2030: $224 | 2030: $340 | 2030: $111 | |
| Eastern Europe and Central Asia | 2020: $1488 | 2020: $855 | 2020: $1268 | 2020: $627 |
| 2030: $1440 | 2030: $806 | 2030: $1220 | 2030: $627 | |
| Latin America | 2020: $1551 | 2020: $1059 | 2020: $1381 | 2020: $485 |
| 2030: $1292 | 2030: $800 | 2030: $1220 | 2030: $485 | |
| Middle East and North Africa | 2020: $1232 | 2020: $702 | 2020: $1049 | 2020: $524 |
| 2030: $1206 | 2030: $524 | 2030: $1023 | 2030: $524 | |
| West and Central Africa | 2020: $391 | 2020: $259 | 2020: $348 | 2020: $126 |
| 2030: $379 | 2030: $247 | 2030: $336 | 2030: $126 | |
| East and Southern Africa | 2020: $391 | 2020: $259 | 2020: $348 | 2020: $126 |
| 2030: $379 | 2030: $247 | 2030: $336 | 2030: $126 |
Fig 1Trends in new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths in low- and middle-income countries from 2010–2030, for the Fast-Track and constant coverage scenarios.
Fig 2Annual Resource Needs by Intervention, 2013–2030.
Key: SW = sex workers, MSM = men who have sex with men, PWID = people who inject drugs, OST = opioid substitution therapy, PMTCT = prevention of mother-to-child transmission, VMMC = voluntary medical male circumcision, PEP = post-exposure prophylaxis, PrEP = pre-exposure prophylaxis, Dev. Synergies = Development Synergies
Fig 3Resources available in 2014 and resources required from 2015–2030 by level of income in low- and middle-income countries (according to 2015 WB income level classification).