Dimitrov Dobromir, Boily Marie-Claude, Mâsse Benoît R, Brown Elizabeth R
Vaccine & Infectious Disease Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, USA.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK.
J AIDS Clin Res. 2012 Jul 8;Suppl 5(4). doi: 10.4172/2155-6113.s5-004.
The first antiretroviral drug (Truvada) to be used as a pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in preventing HIV transmission is about to be approved. Behavioral studies suggest that a portion of users may share anti-retroviral drugs with sex partners, family, or friends. Pill sharing will decrease PrEP efficacy and adherence level, and potentially create an environment favorable for the development of drug resistance. We aim to evaluate the potential impact of pill sharing on the PrEP effectiveness and on the rates of drug-resistance development in heterosexual populations.
A transmission dynamic model was used to assess the population-level impact of oral PrEP. The fractions of new HIV infections prevented (CPF), drug resistance prevalence and the proportion of new infections in which drug-resistant HIV is transmitted (TDR) are evaluated over fixed time periods. The influence of different factors on CPF and TDR is studied through simulations, using epidemic parameters representative of the countries in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Without pill sharing, a 70% efficacious PrEP used consistently by 60% of uninfected individuals prevents 52.8% (95% CI 49.4%-56.4%) of all new HIV infections over ten years with drug-resistant HIV transmitted in 2.2% of the new infections. Absolute CPF may vary by 9% if up to 20% of the users share PrEP while the level of TDR and total resistance prevalence may increase by up to 6-fold due to pill sharing in some intervention scenarios.
Pill sharing may increase the PrEP coverage level achieved in the population but it also affects the PrEP efficacy for the users who do not follow the prescribed schedule. More importantly, it creates a pool of untracked users who remain unreached by the effort to avoid sub-optimal PrEP usage by infected people. This increases substantially the potential risk of drug resistance in the population.
首款用于暴露前预防(PrEP)以防止艾滋病毒传播的抗逆转录病毒药物(特鲁瓦达)即将获批。行为学研究表明,部分使用者可能会与性伴侣、家人或朋友分享抗逆转录病毒药物。药物共享会降低PrEP的疗效和依从性水平,并可能营造出有利于耐药性发展的环境。我们旨在评估药物共享对PrEP有效性以及异性恋人群中耐药性发展率的潜在影响。
使用传播动力学模型评估口服PrEP对人群层面的影响。在固定时间段内评估预防的新艾滋病毒感染比例(CPF)、耐药性流行率以及传播耐药性艾滋病毒的新感染比例(TDR)。通过模拟研究不同因素对CPF和TDR的影响,使用代表撒哈拉以南非洲国家的流行参数。
在不发生药物共享的情况下,60%未感染个体持续使用70%有效的PrEP,在十年内可预防52.8%(95%置信区间49.4%-56.4%)的所有新艾滋病毒感染,其中2.2%的新感染传播耐药性艾滋病毒。如果高达20%的使用者共享PrEP,绝对CPF可能会有9%的差异,而在某些干预情况下,由于药物共享,TDR水平和总耐药性流行率可能会增加高达6倍。
药物共享可能会提高人群中实现的PrEP覆盖率水平,但也会影响未按规定方案服药的使用者的PrEP疗效。更重要的是,它会产生一批未被追踪的使用者,而避免感染者使用次优PrEP的努力无法触及到他们。这大幅增加了人群中耐药性的潜在风险。