| Literature DB >> 30440000 |
Georgia Vourli1, Georgios Nikolopoulos2, Vasilios Paparizos3, Athanasios Skoutelis4, Symeon Metallidis5, Panagiotis Gargalianos6, Antonios Papadopoulos7, Maria Chini8, Nikolaos V Sipsas9, Mina Psychogiou10, Georgios Chrysos11, Helen Sambatakou12, Charalambos Gogos13, Olga Katsarou14, Dimitra Paraskeva15, Nikos Dedes16, Giota Touloumi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Aiming to eliminate HIV infection, UNAIDS has set a global "90-90-90" target by 2020. We sought to construct a 6-stages HIV Cascade of Care (CoC) in Greece, overall and by risk group, to assess risk-group and stage-specific progress in achieving the UNAIDS target. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Combining data from the HIV/AIDS surveillance system and a population-based HIV cohort study, the CoC included: i) number of people living with HIV (PLHIV) by end of 2013; ii) proportion of PLHIV ever diagnosed; iii) proportion of diagnosed linked-to-care iv) proportion of linked-to-care ever initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART); v) proportion of treated who retained-in-care vi) proportion of those retained-in-care who were virally suppressed (≤200 copies/mL) at their last visit (01/07/2012-31/12/2013).Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30440000 PMCID: PMC6237384 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The six-point Cascade of care for all HIV-infected individuals, for the subgroups of MSM, PWID, heterosexual men and women , and for people originating from a country other than Greece.
Individuals in each stage are considered as a subgroup of the previous stage.
| All | MSM | PWID | Heterosexuals | Migrants | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14,147 | 5,832 | 1,523 | 3,165 | - | |
| (13,691–14,588) | (5,521–6,104) | (1,433–1,621) | (2,959–3,464) | ||
| 11,096 | 5,133 | 1,325 | 2,454 | 2,158 | |
| (78.4, 76.1–81.0) | (88.0, 84.1–93.0) | (87.0, 81.7–92.5) | (77.5, 70.8–82.9) | ||
| 9,544 (86.0) | 4,988 (97.2) | 1,070 (80.8) | 2,291 (93.4) | 1,702 (78.9) | |
| 7,488 (78.5) | 4,147 (83.1) | 699 (65.3) | 1991 (86.9) | 1,199 (70.4) | |
| 6,466 | 3,692 | 611 | 1,623 | 847 | |
| (86.4-, 85.5–87.2) | (89.0, 87.8–90.0) | (87.4, 83.9–90.4) | (81.5, 79.5–83.3) | (70.6, 67.2–73.8) | |
| 5,635 | 3241 | 438 | 1,441 | 721 | |
| (87.1, 85.9–88.4) | (87.8, 86.1–89.3) | (71.7, 66.2–76.8) | (88.8, 86.0–88.7) | (85.2, 80.0–90.0) | |
| 42.6 | 59.1 | 31.3 | 48.9 | 35.1 | |
| (41.0–43.9) | (56.4–62.4) | (28.3–35.0) | (45.2–53.5) | (33.1–37.1) |
† MSM: Men who have sex with men; PWID: People who inject drugs
*The number of migrants who were unaware of their status was not estimated
** Among PLHIV (persons virally suppressed who had not been treated were included)
*** Among the diagnosed
Fig 1Cascade of care for the total population of PLHIV.
The numbers between the bars correspond to proportion of the previous stage, while the numbers above the bars correspond to proportions of PLHIV. Vertical lines on the top of the Diagnosed, Retained to care and Virally suppressed bars correspond to 95% Confidence Intervals.
Fig 2Flowchart of HIV infected individuals’ engagement in each stage of care, by the end of 2013.
The estimates of the number of people who are retained to care, currently on treatment and virally suppressed are based on the AMACS cohort data.
Fig 3Cascade of care for men who have sex with men (MSM), people who inject drugs (PWID) and heterosexuals (A) and for migrants (B). The total number of migrants living with HIV could not be estimated; thus, the first stage of this CoC is the number of diagnosed migrants. The numbers between the bars correspond to proportion of the previous stage, while the numbers above the bars correspond to proportions of PLHIV for A and to proportions of diagnosed for B. Vertical lines on the top of the Diagnosed, Retained to care and Virally suppressed bars correspond to 95% Confidence Intervals.