| Literature DB >> 32602618 |
Kristin M Wall1,2, Mubiana Inambao1,3, William Kilembe1, Etienne Karita1, Elwyn Chomba4, Bellington Vwalika1,5, Joseph Mulenga1, Rachel Parker1, Tyronza Sharkey1, Amanda Tichacek1, Eric Hunter1,6,7, Robert Yohnka1, Gordon Streeb8, Phaedra S Corso9, Susan Allen1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Couples' voluntary HIV counselling and testing (CVCT) is a high-impact HIV prevention intervention in Rwanda and Zambia. Our objective was to model the cost-per-HIV infection averted by CVCT in six African countries guided by an HIV prevention cascade framework. The HIV prevention cascade as yet to be applied to evaluating CVCT effectiveness or cost-effectiveness.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; HIV; HIV prevention cascade; cost-effectiveness; costs and cost analysis; couples; prevention and control
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32602618 PMCID: PMC7325504 DOI: 10.1002/jia2.25522
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Figure 1Generic HIV prevention cascade for CVCT. CVCT, couples’ voluntary HIV counselling and testing.
Base‐case model parameters applied to all countries
| Value and source | |
|---|---|
| CVCT effective use (HIV prevention impact) | |
| Among concordant HIV‐negative couples | 47% [ |
| Among discordant couples not on ART | 63% [ |
| Among discordant couples on ART | 79% [ |
| ART use | |
| Immediate increase in uptake after CVCT | 38% [ |
| Additional uptake per year | 5% [ |
| CVCT motivation among the priority population | |
| Initiation phase | 20% of couples [ |
| Expansion phase | 38% of couples [ |
| Maturation phase | 66% of couples [ |
| Maintenance phase | 15% of couples [ |
| CVCT access among those motivated | |
| Initiation phase | 50% of motivated couples [ |
| Expansion Phase | 56% of motivated couples [ |
| Maturation phase | 60% of motivated couples [ |
| Maintenance phase | 70% of motivated couples [ |
ART, antiretroviral treatment; CVCT, couples’ voluntary HIV counselling and testing; USD, United States Dollar.
Country‐specific base‐case model parameters
| Model input | Southern Africa | Eastern Africa | Western Africa | |||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Africa | Zimbabwe | Kenya | Tanzania | Ivory Coast | Sierra Leone | |||||||||||||||||||
| Value | Value | Value | Value | Value | Value | |||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Adult population (ages 15 to 64) | 37,904,001 | [ | 7 892 000 | [ | 2 974 500 | [ | 3 001 700 | [ | 1 383 900 | [ | 428 200 | [ | ||||||||||||
| Adult population in stable couples (%) | 35% | [ | 58% | [ | 57% | [ | 57% | [ | 59% | [ | 62% | [ | ||||||||||||
| 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Discordant couples among all stable couples (%) | 16% | [ | 9% | [ | 6% | [ | 5% | [ | 5% | [ | 3% | [ | ||||||||||||
| Concordant‐negative couples among all stable couples (%) | 70% | [ | 80% | [ | 91% | [ | 91% | [ | 93% | [ | 97% | [ | ||||||||||||
| 3 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Adults on ART of all estimated positive adults (%) | 62% | [ | 89% | [ | 69% | [ | 72% | [ | 55% | [ | 43% | [ | ||||||||||||
| 4 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Uncounselled seroincidence among concordant‐negative couples (per 100 PY) | 1/100 PY | [ | 1/100 PY | [ | 0.5/100 PY | [ | 0.5/100 PY | [ | 0.5/100 PY |
| 0.5/100 PY |
| ||||||||||||
| 5 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Uncounselled seroincidence among non‐ART using discordant couples (per 100 PY) | 13/100 PY | [ | 13/100 PY | [ | 10/100 PY | [ | 10/100 PY | [ | 10/100 PY |
| 10/100 PY |
| ||||||||||||
| 6 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Uncounselled seroincidence among ART using discordant couples (per 100 PY) | 8/100 PY | [ | 8/100 PY | [ | 5/100 PY |
| 5/100 PY |
| 5/100 PY |
| 5/100 PY |
| ||||||||||||
| 7 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Cost‐per‐couple tested (2015 USD) | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | ||||||||||||||||||
| Initiation phase | $229 | $84 | $59 | $73 | $103 | $71 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Expansion phase | $153 | $56 | $39 | $49 | $69 | $47 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Maturation phase | $76 | $28 | $20 | $24 | $34 | $24 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Maintenance phase | $92 | $34 | $24 | $29 | $41 | $28 | ||||||||||||||||||
“Uncounselled” indicates pre‐couples’ voluntary HIV counselling and testing. Demographic Health Survey defines stable couples as partners consensually living together in a union within a household. Most recent Demographic Health Survey data used. ART, antiretroviral treatment; PY, person year.
Estimated based on lower HIV incidence in Eastern and Western Africa versus Southern Africa [36].
Proportion of adult infections averted, overall CHIA and total cost for CVCT in six African countries (primary base‐case analyses)
| Southern Africa | Total cost of CVCT | Cumulative HIV infections averted | Average CHIA | Proportion of infections averted, % | 2018 PEPFAR Budget [ | Cost of CVCT as % of PEPFAR budget for five years, % | Per capita GDP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Africa | $532,704,861 | 418,855 | $1272 | 62 | $575,258,390 | 19 | $13,054 |
| Zimbabwe | $67,053,208 | 121,984 | $550 | 58 | $145,546,200 | 9 | $2,224 |
| East‐Central Africa | |||||||
| Kenya | $176,419,535 | 231,312 | $763 | 57 | $505,480,000 | 7 | $3,384 |
| Tanzania | $219,582,392 | 219,486 | $1000 | 56 | $512,422,250 | 9 | $3,094 |
| Western Africa | |||||||
| Ivory Coast | $145,955,594 | 119,508 | $1221 | 57 | $140,508,601 | 21 | $3,771 |
| Sierra Leone | $33,113,126 | 34,803 | $951 | 54 | Unknown | – | $1,547 |
No PEPFAR budget reported for Sierra Leone. Per capita GDP (2017 estimates in 2015 USD): https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the‐world‐factbook/rankorder/2004rank.html. CHIA, cost per HIV infection averted; CVCT, Couples' HIV voluntary counselling and testing; PEPFAR: President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.
Weighted average across all implementation phases.
Figure 2Modelled cost‐per‐HIV infection averted by phase of CVCT implementation in six sub‐Saharan African countries. CVCT, couples' HIV voluntary counselling and testing.
Parameters and results of one‐way sensitivity analyses: Illustrative example of South Africa
| Sensitivity analysis parameters | Infections averted % change | Total cost of CVCT % change | CHIA % change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Discount rate | |||
| 2% | 3% | 5% | 2% |
| 4% | −3% | −5% | −2% |
| Cost/couple tested (by implementation phase) | |||
| $183; $122; $61; $74 | 0% | −20% | −20% |
| $274; $184; $91; $110 | 0% | 20% | 20% |
| Proportion adults in heterosexual couples | |||
| 28% | −20% | −20% | 0% |
| 42% | 20% | 20% | 0% |
| Proportion couples motivated for CVCT (by implementation phase) | |||
| 40%; 40%; 53%; 12% | −20% | −20% | 0% |
| 60%; 60%; 79%; 18% | 20% | 20% | 0% |
| Proportion couples with access to CVCT (by implementation phase) | |||
| 16%; 32%; 48%; 56% | −20% | −20% | 0% |
| 24%; 48%; 72%; 84% | 20% | 20% | 0% |
| Proportion concordant negative | |||
| 56% | −9% | 0% | 10% |
| 84% | 10% | 0% | −9% |
| Proportion discordant | |||
| 13% | −9% | 0% | 10% |
| 19% | 11% | 0% | −10% |
| HIV seroincidence rates before CVCT (per 100 PY) | |||
| Among concordant HIV‐negative couples | |||
| 0.80 | −9% | 0% | 10% |
| 1.20 | 9% | 0% | −8% |
| Among ART using HIV discordant couples | |||
| 6.40 | −6% | 0% | 6% |
| 9.60 | 6% | 0% | −6% |
| Among non‐ ART using HIV discordant couples | |||
| 10.40 | −4% | 0% | 4% |
| 15.60 | 4% | 0% | −4% |
| CVCT prevention impact | |||
| Among concordant HIV‐negative couples | |||
| 38% | −7% | 0% | 8% |
| 56% | 7% | 0% | −7% |
| Among ART using HIV discordant couples | |||
| 63% | −10% | 0% | 11% |
| 95% | 11% | 0% | −10% |
| Among non‐ART using HIV discordant couples | |||
| 50% | −2% | 0% | 2% |
| 76% | 2% | 0% | −2% |
| ART use | |||
| Among HIV‐positive adults before CVCT | |||
| 50% | 2% | 0% | −2% |
| 74% | −3% | 0% | 3% |
| Among HIV‐positive adults after CVCT | |||
| 61% | −1% | 0% | 1% |
| 92% | 1% | 0% | −1% |
| Proportion initiating ART each year after CVCT | |||
| 4% | 0% | 0% | 0% |
| 6% | 0% | 0% | 0% |
ART, antiretroviral treatment; CHIA, cost‐per‐HIV infection averted; CVCT, couples’ voluntary HIV counselling and testing; PY, person‐years.
% Change relative to base‐case primary analyses.
Probabilistic sensitivity analysis results
| Varying costs‐per‐couple tested by ±50% (uniform distribution) of the base‐case estimates | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Southern Africa | Total cost of CVCT | SD | CV | Average CHIA | SD | CV |
| South Africa | 527,493,591 | 80,271,276 | 15% | $1280 | $198 | 15% |
| Zimbabwe | 67,478,299 | 9,792,498 | 15% | $466 | $73 | 16% |
| East‐Central Africa | ||||||
| Kenya | 175,560,051 | 28,074,065 | 16% | $765 | $116 | 15% |
| Tanzania | 219,184,615 | 33,759,017 | 15% | $997 | $158 | 16% |
| Western Africa | ||||||
| Ivory Coast | 145,820,457 | 22,312,561 | 15% | $1217 | $191 | 16% |
| Sierra Leone | 33,384,147 | 4,850,786 | 15% | $953 | $145 | 15% |
CHIA, cost per HIV infection averted; CV, coefficient of variation is the standard deviation divided by the mean estimate; CVCT, couples voluntary HIV counselling and testing; SD, standard deviation.
No impact on cumulative HIV infections averted;
no impact on total cost of CVCT.
CVCT HIV prevention cascade domains with key barriers and solutions
| Motivation | Access | Effective use |
|---|---|---|
| Reasons for gap | ||
| Lack of knowledge and low risk perception | Lack of availability or easy access in government facilities |
Inconsistent condom use, continued outside partner risk Lack of ART uptake |
| Lack of men's ability to attend regular clinic hours, opportunity costs | Lack of trained government providers | |
| Concerns about CVCT consequences | Perceived cost/affordability | Non‐linkage to ART programmes |
| Evidence‐based ways to close the gap | ||
| Interventions | ||
|
Incentives/transport reimbursement Partner tracing, male‐focused sessions, 'expert couple' and influential community leader promotions Informational messaging highlighting partner safety, U = U, and addressing common concerns |
Convenient service delivery hours and platforms Provider training and reimbursement (possibly during off‐hours) |
Ongoing condom and behavioural counselling, targeted safe conception and alcohol counselling Integration with ART (for treatment and prevention) programmes |
| Platforms to deliver interventions | ||
| Clinics, community health workers, influential peers and mass media | Clinic‐based services, mobile testing, home‐based testing, self‐testing | Clinic‐based services, mobile testing, home‐based testing, self‐testing |
| Policies to support interventions | ||
| Budgets for training messaging, demand creation and incentives | Budgets, required reporting indicators and targets for CVCT | Budgets for integrated services, ongoing M&E |
| Training and reimbursement of providers | ||
ART, antiretroviral treatment; CVCT, couples voluntary HIV counselling and testing; M&E, monitoring and evaluation.