| Literature DB >> 29971734 |
Lei Zhang1,2,3, Peng Peng3, Yumeng Wu4, Xiaomeng Ma1, Nyi Nyi Soe1, Xiaojie Huang5, Hao Wu5, Martin Markowitz4, Kathrine Meyers6.
Abstract
Risk of HIV infection is high in Chinese MSM, with an annual HIV incidence ranging from 3.41 to 13.7/100 person-years. Tenofovir-based PrEP is effective in preventing HIV transmission in MSM. This study evaluates the epidemiological impact and cost-effectiveness of implementing PrEP in Chinese MSM over the next two decades. A compartmental model for HIV was used to forecast the impact of PrEP on number of infections, deaths, and disability-adjusted life years (DALY) averted. We also provide an estimate of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) and the cost per DALY averted of the intervention. Without PrEP, there will be 1.1-3.0 million new infections and 0.7-2.3 million HIV-related deaths in the next two decades. Moderate PrEP coverage (50%) would prevent 0.17-0.32 million new HIV infections. At Truvada's current price in China, daily oral PrEP costs $46,813-52,008 per DALY averted and is not cost-effective; on-demand Truvada reduces ICER to $25,057-27,838 per DALY averted, marginally cost-effective; daily generic tenofovir-based regimens further reduce ICER to $3675-8963, wholly cost-effective. The cost of daily oral Truvada PrEP regimen would need to be reduced by half to achieve cost-effectiveness and realize the public health good of preventing hundreds of thousands of HIV infections among MSM in China.Entities:
Keywords: China; Cost-effectiveness; MSM; Mathematical modeling; PrEP
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Year: 2019 PMID: 29971734 PMCID: PMC6318074 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-018-2205-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165