Freedberg Kenneth A, Kumarasamy Nagalingeswaran, Losina Elena, Cecelia Anitha J, Scott Callie A, Divi Nomita, Flanigan Timothy P, Lu Zhigang, Weinstein Milton C, Wang Bingxia, Ganesh Aylur K, Bender Melissa A, Mayer Kenneth H, Walensky Rochelle P
Divisions of General Medicine and Infectious Disease and the Partners AIDS Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
AIDS. 2007 Jul;21 Suppl 4(Suppl 4):S117-28. doi: 10.1097/01.aids.0000279714.60935.a2.
India has more than 5.7 million people infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). In 2004, the Indian government began providing antiretroviral therapy (ART), and there are now an estimated 56 500 people receiving ART.
To project the life expectancy, cost, and cost-effectiveness associated with different strategies for using ART in India, to inform treatment programs.
We utilized an HIV disease simulation model, incorporating data on natural history, treatment efficacy, and costs of care from India. Input parameters for the simulated cohort included mean age 32.6 years and mean CD4 count 318 cells/microl (SD 291 cells/microl). We examined different criteria for starting and stopping ART with a first-line regimen of stavudine/lamivudine/nevirapine, and the impact of a second-line protease-inhibitor-based regimen. Cost-effectiveness in US dollars per year of life saved (US$/YLS) was compared incrementally among alternative starting, sequencing, and stopping criteria.
Discounted (undiscounted) mean survival ranged from 34.5 (37.5) months with no ART to 64.7 (73.6) months with one line of therapy initiated at CD4 <350 cells/microl, to 88.9 (106.5) months with two lines of therapy initiated at CD4 <350 cells/microl. Lifetime medical costs ranged from US$530 (no ART) to US$5430 (two ART regimens) per person. With one line of therapy, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratios ranged from US$430/YLS to US$550/YLS as the CD4 starting criterion was increased from CD4 <250 cells/microl to <350 cells/microl. Use of two lines of therapy had an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of US$1880/YLS compared with the use of first-line therapy alone. Results were sensitive to the costs of second-line therapy and criteria for stopping therapy.
In India, antiretroviral therapy will lead to major survival benefits and is cost-effective by World Health Organization criteria. The availability of second-line regimens will further increase survival, but their cost-effectiveness depends on their relative cost compared with first-line regimens.
印度有超过570万人感染了人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)。2004年,印度政府开始提供抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART),目前估计有56500人正在接受ART治疗。
预测印度不同ART使用策略的预期寿命、成本和成本效益,为治疗方案提供参考。
我们使用了一个HIV疾病模拟模型,纳入了来自印度的自然病史、治疗效果和护理成本数据。模拟队列的输入参数包括平均年龄32.6岁和平均CD4细胞计数318个/微升(标准差291个/微升)。我们研究了使用司他夫定/拉米夫定/奈韦拉平一线治疗方案开始和停止ART的不同标准,以及基于二线蛋白酶抑制剂治疗方案的影响。在替代的开始、排序和停止标准之间逐步比较了每年挽救生命的成本效益(美元/年挽救生命年数)。
贴现(未贴现)的平均生存期从无ART治疗时的34.5(37.5)个月到CD4<350个/微升时开始一线治疗的64.7(73.6)个月,再到CD4<350个/微升时开始二线治疗的88.9(106.5)个月。每人终身医疗成本从530美元(无ART治疗)到5430美元(两种ART治疗方案)不等。采用一线治疗时,随着CD4开始标准从CD4<250个/微升提高到<350个/微升,增量成本效益比从430美元/年挽救生命年数到550美元/年挽救生命年数不等。与仅使用一线治疗相比,使用二线治疗的增量成本效益比为1880美元/年挽救生命年数。结果对二线治疗成本和停止治疗标准敏感。
在印度,抗逆转录病毒疗法将带来重大的生存益处,按照世界卫生组织的标准具有成本效益。二线治疗方案的可用性将进一步提高生存率,但其成本效益取决于与一线治疗方案相比的相对成本。