| Literature DB >> 33547993 |
Anne M Neilan1,2,3,4, Audrey C Bangs5, Michael Hudgens6, Kunjal Patel7, Allison L Agwu8, Ingrid V Bassett9,5,10,11, Aditya H Gaur12, Emily P Hyle9,5,10,11, Catherine M Crespi13, Keith J Horvath14, Caitlin M Dugdale9,5, Kimberly A Powers15, H Jonathon Rendina16, Milton C Weinstein17, Rochelle P Walensky9,5,10,11, Kenneth A Freedberg9,5,10,11,18, Andrea L Ciaranello9,5,10,11.
Abstract
The Adolescent Medicine Trials Network for HIV/AIDS Interventions is evaluating treatment adherence interventions (AI) to improve virologic suppression (VS) among youth with HIV (YWH). Using a microsimulation model, we compared two strategies: standard-of-care (SOC) and a hypothetical 12-month AI that increased cohort-level VS in YWH in care by an absolute ten percentage points and cost $100/month/person. Projected outcomes included primary HIV transmissions, deaths and life-expectancy, lifetime HIV-related costs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs, $/quality-adjusted life-year [QALY]). Compared to SOC, AI would reduce HIV transmissions by 15% and deaths by 12% at 12 months. AI would improve discounted life expectancy/person by 8 months at an added lifetime cost/person of $5,300, resulting in an ICER of $7,900/QALY. AI would be cost-effective at $2,000/month/person or with efficacies as low as a 1 percentage point increase in VS. YWH-targeted adherence interventions with even modest efficacy could improve life expectancy, prevent onward HIV transmissions, and be cost-effective.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Adolescents; Cost-effectiveness; HIV; Intervention; Modeling; Young adults
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33547993 PMCID: PMC8342630 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-021-03169-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Input parameters for a model of a 12-month adherence intervention in youth with HIV in the United States
| Parameter | Base case value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD) | 19.5 (3.6) | [ |
| Male/Female sex, % | 79/21 | [ |
| CD4 at model start, cells/µL, mean (SD) | 545 (228) | [ |
| HIV RNA setpoint off ART | [ | |
| Mean log10 copies/mL (copies/mL) | 5.22 (165,800) | |
| Distribution, % of cohort | ||
| > 100,000 copies/mL | 25.1 | |
| 30,001–100,000 | 42.0 | |
| 10,001–30,000 | 20.9 | |
| 3,001–10,000 | 5.6 | |
| 501–3,000 | 6.4 | |
| 0–500 | 0 | |
| Adherence to ART ≤ 25 years, % of cohort | Modeled cohortb | |
| Adherence > 90% | 20 | |
| Adherence 81–90% | 14 | |
| Adherence 71–80% | 9 | |
| Adherence 61–70% | 7 | |
| Adherence ≤ 60% | 50 | |
| Adherence to ART > 25 years, % of cohort | Modeled cohortb | |
| Adherence > 90% | 34 | |
| Adherence 81–90% | 12 | |
| Adherence 71–80% | 6 | |
| Adherence 61–70% | 5 | |
| Adherence ≤ 60% | 43 | |
| ART efficacy (VL < 50 copies/mL at 48 weeks)c, % | ||
| > 95% adherence | 96.4 | [ |
| < 57% adherence | 0 | [ |
| Late virologic failure, range by adherence level, monthly probability, % | 0.2–18 | [ |
| Loss to follow-up after 12 months, range by adherence level, monthly probability | 0.7–2 | [ |
| Returning to care, monthly probability | 0.015 | [ |
| [ | ||
| Pneumocystis pneumonia | 0.0004–0.0084 | |
| Mycobacterium avium complex | 0.0001–0.0047 | |
| Toxoplasmosis | 0.0001–0.0007 | |
| Cytomegalovirus | 0.0001–0.0082 | |
| Fungal infection | 0.0001–0.0032 | |
| Other opportunistic infection | 0.0006–0.0116 | |
| [ | ||
| CD4 > 500 | 0.00025 | |
| CD4 351–500 | 0.00583 | |
| CD4 201–350 | 0.00092–0.02696 | |
| CD4 101–200 | 0.00250–0.03303 | |
| CD4 51–100 | 0.00341–0.03254 | |
| CD4 0–50 | 0.01472–0.06900 | |
| [ | ||
| 13–14 years | 0.00001–0.00002 | |
| 15–19 | 0.00002–0.00004 | |
| 20–24 | 0.00003–0.00006 | |
| 25–29 | 0.00004–0.00007 | |
| 30–39 | 0.00005–0.00012 | |
| 40–49 | 0.00011–0.00025 | |
| 50–59 | 0.00027–0.00068 | |
| 60–69 | 0.00071–0.00175 | |
| 70–79 | 0.00181–0.00416 | |
| 80–99 | 0.00433–0.01320 | |
| HIV transmissions, range by VL, per 100PY | [ | |
| > 100,000 copies/mL | 16.5 | |
| 10,001–100,000 | 14.8 | |
| 3,001–10,000 | 7.6 | |
| 501–3,000 | 3.8 | |
| 21–500 | 0.3 | |
| 0–20 | 0 | |
| Adherence intervention, monthly | 100 | Modeled intervention |
| Routine care, range by CD4 cell count, monthlyf | 260–1,150 | [ |
| Opportunistic infection | 7,100–16,700 | [ |
| ART, monthly | 2,670 | [ |
SD standard deviation, HVL HIV viral load (HIV RNA), ART antiretroviral therapy, VS virologic suppression, USD United States dollars, PY person-years
aAdherence is measured as percent of pills taken
bSee Supplemental Methods for details
cEfficacy between 57 and 95% adherence is exponentially interpolated (Supplemental Methods)
dA multiplier of 0.2 is applied for patients on ART [73, 74]
eA multiplier of 0.1 is applied for patients on ART [73, 74]
fHigher CD4 counts are associated with LOWER routine care costs
Additional details of inputs may be found in the Supplemental Methods
Clinical and cost-effectiveness outcomes for a model of a 12-month adherence intervention in youth with HIV in the United States compared to standard-of-care
| 12-month outcomes | Lifetime outcomes | Lifetime outcomes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strategy | OIs (rate/100PY) | Onward HIV transmissions (rate/100PY) | Death (rate/100PY) | Life expectancy (months) | Per-person cost | Life expectancy (months) | Per-person cost | ICER ($/QALY) |
| SOC | 4.0 | 8.1 | 1.5 | 264 | 778,900 | 151 | 453,500 | – |
| AI | 3.6 | 6.9 | 1.3 | 276 | 802,900 | 159 | 458,800 | 7,900 |
OI opportunistic infection; SOC standard-of-care; AI adherence intervention; PY person-year; ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY quality-adjusted life-year; USD 2018, 2018 US dollars
Where noted, life expectancy and costs are discounted at 3%/year. Costs and ICERs are rounded to the nearest $100. In-text cited costs are rounded separately. The ICER quantifies the cost-effectiveness of one strategy compared to another regarding the degree to which the intervention provides benefit relative to its cost. The willingness-to-pay-threshold is a normative value which varies widely by setting and decision-maker; for interpretability, we have chosen ≤$100,000/QALY, however a range of values have been suggested in US settings [14]
Fig. 1HIV care continuum outcomes: 12-month adherence intervention (AI) compared to standard-of-care (SOC). Includes cross-sectional snapshot of proportion alive, in care, and virologically suppressed of those in the initial cohort at A) one year after model start, B) five years after model start, and C) 10 years after model start. In both the cohorts, at model start, 100% of the modeled population was alive and in care, and 50% were virologically suppressed. AI began at model start and ended at Year 1. Years 5 and 10 therefore represent 4 and 9 years after completion of the intervention, respectively. Virologic suppression, among those in care, for SOC vs. AI was: Year 0: 50% vs. 50%; Year 1: 50% vs. 60%; Year 5: 64% vs. 67%; Year 10: 83% vs. 83%. SOC standard-of-care, AI adherence intervention
Fig. 2Sensitivity analyses: Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of a 12-month adherence intervention (AI) compared to standard-of-care (SOC). Each parameter is varied through the range shown in parentheses, which is preceded by the base case input value. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) for the comparison of adherence intervention to standard-of-care, in $/quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) are shown on the horizontal axis. The range of ICERs for each varied parameter is indicated by the blue horizontal bars. Longer blue horizontal bars indicate parameters to which the model results are more sensitive. The vertical black line represents the base case ICER. ART antiretroviral therapy, LTFU loss to follow-up, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, RTC return to care
Fig. 3Two-way sensitivity analyses: varying adherence intervention cost and efficacy. Intervention efficacy and intervention cost were varied simultaneously. Intervention efficacy is displayed across the horizontal axis while intervention cost is shown as different series represented by color. Intervention efficacy is reported as an absolute increase in cohort-level virologic suppression in AI compared to SOC at the end of the intervention. The ICER produced is shown on the vertical axis in $/QALY. The base case is represented by an X, and the cost-effectiveness threshold is represented by a dashed horizontal line at $100,000/QALY. ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, VS virologic suppression