| Literature DB >> 30837248 |
Parastu Kasaie1, Christina M Schumacher2, Jacky M Jennings2, Stephen A Berry2, Susan A Tuddenham2, Maunank S Shah2, Eli S Rosenberg3, Karen W Hoover4, Thomas L Gift5, Harrell Chesson5, Danielle German1, David W Dowdy1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG) and Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) increase the risk of HIV transmission among men who have sex with men (MSM). Diagnosis of NG/CT may provide an efficient entry point for prevention of HIV through the delivery of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP); however, the additional population-level impact of targeting PrEP to MSM diagnosed with NG/CT is unknown.Entities:
Keywords: Hiv Infection; chlamydia; computer simulation; gonorrhea; homosexuality; pre-exposure prophylaxis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30837248 PMCID: PMC6429744 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023453
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1An agent-based model of Neisseria gonorrhoea/Chlamydia trachomatis (NG/CT) and HIV cotransmission. The top panel represents the HIV care continuum and natural history: On infection with HIV, individuals serially progress through three disease stages over time; this progression can be halted by initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART), which is assumed to result —if taken—in viral suppression within 4–24 weeks (see table 1).29 We assume, for simplicity, that engagement in care involves initiation of ART (as episodes of care engagement not resulting in ART initiation do not affect HIV transmission in the model). HIV-positive individuals in care are assumed to undergo regular screening for NG/CT (marked in red) subject to patients presenting for scheduled visits and clinician decision to screen. The bottom panel represents the natural history of NG/CT: infection may be symptomatic or asymptomatic, individuals remain infectious until diagnosis and treatment (which can occur either through symptomatic presentation to care or routine screening of asymptomatic individuals) or spontaneous resolution. On diagnosis with incident NG/CT, we assume that individuals are also screened for HIV infection (marked in yellow); if HIV-negative, we consider the possibility of PrEP delivery in this analysis. PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis.
List of selected simulation parameters and calibration targets
|
| Value | Reference |
| Proportion of cases symptomatic* | ||
| Urethral | 0.74 |
|
| Rectal | 0.20 |
|
| Pharyngeal | 0.10 |
|
| Duration of infection (at each site) in the absence of treatment | (3–12) months† |
|
| Coefficient of NG/CT transmission per week | 0.294 | Calibrated to provide the incidence of NG/CT |
| Proportion of NG/CT infections occurring at each site | Calibrated to provide the site-specific incidence of NG/CT | |
| Urethral | 0.35 | |
| Rectal | 0.49 | |
| Pharyngeal | 0.16 | |
| Increase in HIV transmissibility (for those with urethral or rectal infection) | (1.5–2) fold* |
|
| Increase in HIV susceptibility (for those with urethral or rectal infection) | (1–2.5) fold* |
|
*Values represent a pooled estimate of the reported measures for NG and CT infections.
†Values are selected over uniform distributions across the ranges presented.
‡Values represent the reported levels of NG/CT diagnosis among Baltimore City’s MSM, and they are likely to underestimate the proportion of ongoing rectal and pharyngeal infections. We, therefore, consider such potential underestimation in estimating the annual incidence of NG/CT (see section 2 of the online supplementary material) and have calibrated the model to represent realistic levels of prevalence (see the section on population overview in the main text).
§Mortality rate in late stage is defined as 1/(duration of late-stage disease).
¶Infectiousness assumed equal to that of the chronic disease.
ART, antiretroviral therapy; MSM, men who have sex with men; STI, sexually transmitted infection.
Figure 2Model projections of the distribution of new infections by age and sexual activity level. Shown on the y-axes are the distribution of HIV (A) and NG/CT (B) incidence by age group and the distribution of HIV (C) and NG/CT (D) incidence by the sexual activity level. Bars represent the mean values of simulations (in green) with error bars representing the 95% uncertainty range of observations around each simulated measure. NG/CT, Neisseria gonorrhoeae/Chlamydia trachomatis.
Figure 3Impact of NG/CT-integrated PrEP, according to frequency of NG/CT screening/testing. Shown on the y-axes are the annual incidence of HIV (A), cumulative number of HIV transmissions averted (B), number of MSM on PrEP (C) and NG/CT prevalence (D). The red line depicts a scenario in which all MSM currently diagnosed with NG/CT are placed on PrEP with 60% uptake and adherence (NG/CT-integrated PrEP scenario in the main text), and the blue line shows a hypothetical scenario in which 50% of MSM are additionally screened for NG/CT every year, with those testing positive for NG/CT also offered PrEP. MSM, men who have sex with men; NG/CT, Neisseria gonorrhoeae/Chlamydia trachomatis; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis.
Figure 4Relative impact of NG/CT-integrated PrEP. Shown in this figure is the relative impact of NG/CT-integrated PrEP (in red, also corresponding to the red line in figure 3), compared against PrEP evaluation at NG/CT screening/testing (in blue) and untargeted PrEP (in green), with full description of these scenarios given in the manuscript text. In the first set of experiments, the three strategies are compared under the assumption that the same number of MSM would receive PrEP (panel A to D), or the same number of MSM would be screened for PrEP (panel E to H). Panel A gives the annual incidence of HIV, panel B the number of MSM approached for PrEP, panel C the number of MSM on PrEP at any point in time (all three lines overlapping) and panel D the cumulative reduction in HIV incidence per PrEP person-year in untargeted scenarios relative to NG/CT-targeted scenario (similar pattern in panel E through H). MSM, men who have sex with men; NG/CT, Neisseria gonorrhoeae/Chlamydia trachomatis; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis.