| Literature DB >> 27552090 |
Jared M Baeten1,2,3, Renee Heffron1,3, Lara Kidoguchi1, Nelly R Mugo1,4, Elly Katabira5, Elizabeth A Bukusi1,6, Stephen Asiimwe7, Jessica E Haberer8, Jennifer Morton1, Kenneth Ngure9, Nulu Bulya5, Josephine Odoyo6, Edna Tindimwebwa7, Craig Hendrix10, Mark A Marzinke10, Norma C Ware11, Monique A Wyatt11,12, Susan Morrison1, Harald Haugen1, Andrew Mujugira1, Deborah Donnell1,13, Connie Celum1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antiretroviral-based interventions for HIV-1 prevention, including antiretroviral therapy (ART) to reduce the infectiousness of HIV-1 infected persons and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to reduce the susceptibility of HIV-1 uninfected persons, showed high efficacy for HIV-1 protection in randomized clinical trials. We conducted a prospective implementation study to understand the feasibility and effectiveness of these interventions in delivery settings. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27552090 PMCID: PMC4995047 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Fig 1Screening, enrollment, and follow-up.
Reasons for ineligibility are not mutually exclusive. A total of 1,013 higher-risk HIV-1-serodiscordant couples were enrolled. Of the initially HIV-1-seronegative partners, 12 subsequently seroconverted to HIV-1 but were found to have HIV-1 RNA in archived plasma from the time of enrollment, indicating acute seronegative HIV-1 infection.
Characteristics of the study subjects at enrollment (N = 1013 couples).
| Median (interquartile range) or | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Male sex | 679 (67%) |
| Age, years | 30 (26,36) |
| Age <25 y | 207 (20%) |
| Education, years | 8 (7,12) |
| Monthly income, any | 870 (86%) |
| Circumcised (men only) | 454 (67%) |
|
| |
| Age, years | 28 (23,35) |
| Age <25 y | 317 (31%) |
| Education, years | 8 (6,11) |
| Monthly income, any | 739 (73%) |
| CD4 cell count/μL | 436 (272,638) |
| CD4 ≥500 cells/ μL | 420 (41%) |
| HIV-1 plasma RNA, log10 copies/mL | 4.6 (3.9, 5.0) |
| HIV-1 plasma RNA ≥50,000 copies/mL (4.7 log10 copies/mL) | 417 (41%) |
| Time since HIV-1 diagnosis, days | 37 (14, 256) |
|
| |
| Married to each other | 957 (94%) |
| Years living together | 2.5 (0.8,7.0) |
| Years aware of HIV-1 serodiscordant status | 0.1 (0.1,0.3) |
| Proportion without children | 572 (56%) |
| Empiric HIV-1 transmission risk score | |
| 5 | 211 (21%) |
| 6 | 323 (32%) |
| ≥7 | 479 (47%) |
|
| |
| Number of sex acts, prior month | 6 (3,11) |
| Any unprotected sex acts, prior month | 656 (65%) |
| HIV-1 uninfected partner had any sex with outside partner, prior month | 84 (8%) |
* As previously described [11], an empiric risk scoring tool was developed and validated to identify highest-risk HIV-1-serodiscordant African heterosexual couples using data from >8,500 couples enrolled in three prospective studies. The score is composed of variables that are easily measurable in clinical settings: age of the HIV-1-uninfected partner (≤20 y = 4 points, 21–30 y = 1 point, >30 y = 0 points), the number of children in the partnership (0 = 4 points, 1–2 = 1 point, ≥3 = 0 points), circumcision status of HIV-1-uninfected male partners (uncircumcised = 1 point, circumcised = 0 points), marital/cohabitation status (married and/or cohabitating = 1 point, neither married nor cohabitating = 0 points), whether the couple had any unprotected sex in the prior month (yes = 2 points, no = 0 points), and plasma HIV-1 RNA levels in the HIV-1-infected partner (≥50,000 copies/mL = 3 points, 10,000–49,999 copies/mL = 1 point, <10,000 copies/mL = 0 points). The maximum score is 12, and a score of 0–2 has an anticipated HIV-1 incidence of <1% per year, a score of 3–4 has an anticipated incidence of approximately 2% per year, and a score ≥5 has an anticipated HIV-1 incidence of >3%–4% per year.
Distribution of components of the couples’ HIV-1 empiric risk score.
| Risk score element | Category | Score |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Age of HIV-1-uninfected partner | 20 y or less | 4 | 38 (4%) |
| 21–30 y | 1 | 533 (53%) | |
| more than 30 y | 0 | 442 (44%) | |
| Number of children within the partnership | 0 | 2 | 572 (56%) |
| 1–2 | 1 | 334 (33%) | |
| 3 or more | 0 | 107 (11%) | |
| Male HIV-1-uninfected partner circumcision status | Yes | 1 | 225 (22%) |
| No, or HIV-1 uninfected partner is female | 0 | 788 (78%) | |
| Married and/or cohabiting | Yes | 1 | 991 (98%) |
| No | 0 | 22 (2%) | |
| Unprotected sex within partnership in 30 d prior to enrollment | Yes | 2 | 948 (94%) |
| No | 0 | 65 (6%) | |
| HIV-1-infected partner plasma HIV-1 RNA concentration (per mL) | 50,000 copies or higher | 3 | 417 (41%) |
| 10,000–49,999 copies | 1 | 301 (30%) | |
| Fewer than 10,000 copies | 0 | 295 (29%) |
Fig 2Couple ART and PrEP use over time.
This graph illustrates the overall distribution of ART use by HIV-1-infected partners and PrEP use by HIV-1-uninfected partners within the study partnerships, over follow-up. The proportion of couples using only PrEP for HIV-1 prevention declined over time, as HIV-1-infected participants initiated ART, as defined by the PrEP as a bridge to ART approach of the project. Through month 6, there was the greatest overlap between ART and PrEP; thereafter, couples with HIV-1 infected partners that initiated ART at or soon after enrollment begin to discontinue PrEP. The primary reason for couples using neither ART nor PrEP was missed visits, which were considered as not exposed to PrEP (since PrEP was distributed only at the study sites during the study period) nor to ART (which was assumed to have not been initiated until first reported).
Fig 3HIV-1 incidence, expected versus observed.
Expected HIV-1 incidence was estimated from a counterfactual model, bootstrapping data from a comparable at-risk population of HIV-1-serodiscordant couples. The graphic presents results for the entire study population. The table details the overall population estimates as well as analyses stratified by gender of the HIV-1-uninfected partner and baseline plasma HIV-1 RNA concentrations of the HIV-1-infected partner.