| Literature DB >> 27609782 |
Kate M Mitchell1,2, Holly J Prudden1, Reynold Washington3,4, Shajy Isac3,5, Subramanian P Rajaram6, Anna M Foss1, Fern Terris-Prestholt1, Marie-Claude Boily7, Peter Vickerman1,8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In Bangalore, new HIV infections of female sex workers and men who have sex with men continue to occur, despite high condom use. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has high anti-HIV efficacy for men who have sex with men. PrEP demonstration projects are underway amongst Indian female sex workers. We estimated the impact and efficiency of prioritizing PrEP to female sex workers and/or men who have sex with men in Bangalore.Entities:
Keywords: focussed intervention; high-risk group; key population; oral PrEP; prevention; prioritizing; targeting
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27609782 PMCID: PMC5016494 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.19.1.20942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Selected sexual behaviour and intervention parameters
| Parameter | Value | Range |
|---|---|---|
| Sexual behaviour | ||
| Commercial sex acts per year for FSW | 384.0 | 359.0–410.0 |
| Commercial sex acts per year for non-MSM clients | 19.6 | 17.9–21.4 |
| MSM sex partners per year for | 130.5 | 93.0–168.0 |
| MSM sex partners per year for double deckers | 69.5 | 53.0–86.0 |
| MSM sex partners per year for | 49.0 | 2.0–96.0 |
| For those with a regular partner, number of vaginal sex acts per year | 108.4 | 90.8–127.6 |
| Condom use | ||
| % of commercial sex acts in which condom used in 2011 | 90.0 | 87.3–92.7 |
| % of anal sex acts between MSM in which condom used in 2007 | 70.5 | 63.7–77.2 |
| % of sex acts in which condom used in regular partnerships | 16.1 | 5.1–27.0 |
| HIV testing | ||
| % of MSM testing for HIV annually after 2009 | 58 | 50–66 |
| % of FSW testing for HIV annually after 2011 | 90 | 87–92 |
| % of clients, former MSM, former FSW, low-risk population testing for HIV annually after 2007 | 11 | 7–14 |
| PrEP intervention | ||
| Proportion of MSM offered and initiating PrEP upon testing negative for HIV to achieve required PrEP coverage | 20%: 0.105/ | fixed |
| Proportion of FSW offered and initiating PrEP upon testing negative for HIV to achieve required PrEP coverage | 20%: 0.17 | fixed |
| Rate of PrEP dropout, all groups, per person per year | 0.2 | fixed |
| Pre-ART care linkage and dropout | ||
| Proportion linking to pre-ART care, all groups, 2011 onwards | 0.8 | 0.7–0.9 |
| Ratio of dropout from pre-ART care relative ART dropout rate | 2 | 1–3 |
| ART | ||
| Rate at which those in pre-ART care, in HIV stage | Pre-2004, 0 all | fixed |
| Rate of initiating ART per year due to symptoms in AIDS stage | Pre-2004, 0 | 0–2 |
| Relative rate of initiating ART due to symptoms in pre-AIDS stage relative to AIDS stage | 0.1–1 | |
| Relative rate of initiating ART due to symptoms with CD4 < 200 relative to those in pre-AIDS stage | 0.1–1 | |
| Rate of ART dropout, per year | 0.04 | 0.01–0.07 |
| Factor by which HIV progression rates are multiplied when on vs off ART | 1/3 | fixed |
| Intervention efficacies in reducing HIV transmission risk | ||
| Per-sex-act efficacy of ART in anal or vaginal sex (%) | 92 | 26–100 |
| Per-sex-act efficacy of condoms in vaginal sex (%) | 80 | 66–94 |
| Per-sex-act efficacy of condoms in anal sex (%) | 61–94 | |
| Per-sex-act efficacy of PrEP (%) | 93 | fixed |
For sources and details of all other parameters, see Supplementary Table 1.
τ=% of MSM testing for HIV annually after 2009.
Figure 1Percentage of infections averted amongst FSW and HR-MSM for PrEP interventions prioritizing each population.
Percentage of infections averted amongst (a) all FSWs and (b) HR-MSM over five years, for PrEP interventions prioritizing this population, with PrEP adherence and coverage shown. Bar shows median and error bars are 95% credible interval across 115 parameter sets. Credible intervals give the 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles of estimates across all parameter combinations.
Figure 2Coverage and adherence required to meet impact targets.
Combinations of coverage (after five years) and adherence required to meet impact targets of 30 or 50% of infections averted over five or ten years amongst (a) FSW and (b) HR-MSM, when that group is prioritized with a PrEP intervention. Results are shown for the best-fit parameter set.
Figure 3Percentage of infections averted in the whole Bangalore population.
Percentage of infections averted in the whole Bangalore population over five and ten years, for an intervention with 50% adherence and 60% coverage of the priority group (as shown). Bar shows median and error bars are 95% credible interval across 115 parameter sets. Credible intervals give the 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles of estimates across all parameter combinations.
Figure 4PrEP impact and efficiency in the whole population for different prioritization strategies.
(a) Life-years gained, (b) Life-years gained per 100 person-years of PrEP, measured in the whole population over 20 years, and (c) infections averted per 100 person-years of PrEP over five years, when a PrEP intervention with 60% coverage and 50% adherence is prioritized to the different populations shown. Bar shows median and error bars are 95% credible interval across 115 parameter sets.
Figure 5PrEP impact and efficiency in the whole population for different FSW prioritization scenarios.
(a) % infections averted in the whole population after five years and (b) PrEP efficiency (life-years gained per 100 person-years on PrEP) measured in the whole population over 20 years, for the same total number of person-years on PrEP for different FSW prioritization scenarios. Bars show median and error bars are 95% credible interval across 115 parameter sets.
Figure 6PrEP impact and efficiency for the lower condom use scenario.
Impact and efficiency of prioritized PrEP interventions if there had been lower condom use amongst FSWs with their clients and MSM in Bangalore after 2003 (Scenario 2) compared to projections for the baseline scenario with observed levels of condom use (Scenario 1). More details for Scenario 2 are included in the main text and Supplementary File. (a) Impact in terms of % infections averted in the whole population after five years, and (b) efficiency in terms of life-years gained per 100 person-years on PrEP after 20 years, when a PrEP intervention reaches 60% of the prioritized group, with 50% adherence, for the prioritized groups shown.