Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2012 May;54(10):1504-13. doi: 10.1093/cid/cis225. Epub 2012 Apr 3.
Recent trials report the short-term efficacy of tenofovir-based pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for prevention of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. PrEP's long-term impact on patient outcomes, population-level transmission, and cost-effectiveness remains unknown.
We linked data from recent trials to a computer model of HIV acquisition, screening, and care to project lifetime HIV risk, life expectancy (LE), costs, and cost-effectiveness, using 2 PrEP-related strategies among heterosexual South African women: (1) women receiving no PrEP and (2) women not receiving PrEP (a tenofovir-based vaginal microbicide). We used a South African clinical cohort and published data to estimate population demographic characteristics, age-adjusted incidence of HIV infection, and HIV natural history and treatment parameters. Baseline PrEP efficacy (percentage reduction in HIV transmission) was 39% at a monthly cost of $5 per woman. Alternative parameter values were examined in sensitivity analyses.
Among South African women, PrEP reduced mean lifetime HIV risk from 40% to 27% and increased population discounted (undiscounted) LE from 22.51 (41.66) to 23.48 (44.48) years. Lifetime costs of care increased from $7280 to $9890 per woman, resulting in an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $2700/year of life saved, and may, under optimistic assumptions, achieve cost savings. Under baseline HIV infection incidence assumptions, PrEP was not cost saving, even assuming an efficacy >60% and a cost <$1. At an HIV infection incidence of 9.1%/year, PrEP achieved cost savings at efficacies ≥50%.
PrEP in South African women is very cost-effective by South African standards, conferring excellent value under virtually all plausible data scenarios. Although optimistic assumptions would be required to achieve cost savings, these represent important benchmarks for future PrEP study design.
最近的试验报告了基于替诺福韦的暴露前预防(PrEP)在预防人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染方面的短期疗效。PrEP 对患者结局、人群传播和成本效益的长期影响尚不清楚。
我们将最近试验的数据与 HIV 获得、筛查和护理的计算机模型相连接,以预测终生 HIV 风险、预期寿命(LE)、成本和成本效益,在南非异性恋女性中使用两种 PrEP 相关策略:(1)不接受 PrEP 的女性;(2)不接受 PrEP(一种替诺福韦阴道微凝胶)的女性。我们使用南非临床队列和已发表的数据来估计人群人口统计学特征、年龄调整的 HIV 感染发生率以及 HIV 自然史和治疗参数。基线 PrEP 疗效(HIV 传播减少的百分比)为每月每位女性 5 美元,为 39%。在敏感性分析中检查了替代参数值。
在南非女性中,PrEP 将终生 HIV 风险从 40%降低到 27%,并将人群折扣(不折扣)的 LE 从 22.51(41.66)增加到 23.48(44.48)年。每位女性的终生护理成本从 7280 美元增加到 9890 美元,导致增量成本效益比为每年每挽救 1 年生命 2700 美元,并且在乐观的假设下,可能会节省成本。在假设的基础 HIV 感染发生率下,即使假设疗效>60%且成本<1,PrEP 也不能节省成本。在每年 9.1%的 HIV 感染发生率下,PrEP 在疗效≥50%时可实现成本节约。
按照南非标准,南非女性的 PrEP 非常具有成本效益,在几乎所有合理的数据情景下都具有极高的价值。尽管实现成本节约需要乐观的假设,但这些代表了未来 PrEP 研究设计的重要基准。