Vandewalle Björn, Llibre Josep M, Parienti Jean-Jacques, Ustianowski Andrew, Camacho Ricardo, Smith Colette, Miners Alec, Ferreira Diana, Félix Jorge
Exigo Consultores, Lisbon, Portugal.
Fundació Lluita contra la SIDA, Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
PLoS One. 2016 Feb 12;11(2):e0149007. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0149007. eCollection 2016.
The goal of this research was to establish a new and innovative framework for cost-effectiveness modeling of HIV-1 treatment, simultaneously considering both clinical and epidemiological outcomes. EPICE-HIV is a multi-paradigm model based on a within-host micro-simulation model for the disease progression of HIV-1 infected individuals and an agent-based sexual contact network (SCN) model for the transmission of HIV-1 infection. It includes HIV-1 viral dynamics, CD4+ T cell infection rates, and pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics modeling. Disease progression of HIV-1 infected individuals is driven by the interdependent changes in CD4+ T cell count, changes in plasma HIV-1 RNA, accumulation of resistance mutations and adherence to treatment. The two parts of the model are joined through a per-sexual-act and viral load dependent probability of disease transmission in HIV-discordant couples. Internal validity of the disease progression part of the model is assessed and external validity is demonstrated in comparison to the outcomes observed in the STaR randomized controlled clinical trial. We found that overall adherence to treatment and the resulting pattern of treatment interruptions are key drivers of HIV-1 treatment outcomes. Our model, though largely independent of efficacy data from RCT, was accurate in producing 96-week outcomes, qualitatively and quantitatively comparable to the ones observed in the STaR trial. We demonstrate that multi-paradigm micro-simulation modeling is a promising tool to generate evidence about optimal policy strategies in HIV-1 treatment, including treatment efficacy, HIV-1 transmission, and cost-effectiveness analysis.
本研究的目标是建立一个全新的、创新性的框架,用于对HIV-1治疗进行成本效益建模,同时考虑临床和流行病学结果。EPICE-HIV是一个多范式模型,它基于一个用于HIV-1感染个体疾病进展的宿主内微观模拟模型和一个用于HIV-1感染传播的基于主体的性接触网络(SCN)模型。它包括HIV-1病毒动力学、CD4+ T细胞感染率以及药代动力学/药效学建模。HIV-1感染个体的疾病进展由CD4+ T细胞计数的相互依存变化、血浆HIV-1 RNA的变化、耐药突变的积累以及对治疗的依从性驱动。该模型的两个部分通过HIV血清学不一致夫妻中每次性行为和病毒载量依赖的疾病传播概率连接起来。评估了模型疾病进展部分的内部有效性,并与STaR随机对照临床试验中观察到的结果进行比较,证明了其外部有效性。我们发现,总体治疗依从性以及由此产生的治疗中断模式是HIV-1治疗结果的关键驱动因素。我们的模型虽然在很大程度上独立于随机对照试验的疗效数据,但在产生96周结果方面是准确的,在质量和数量上与STaR试验中观察到的结果相当。我们证明,多范式微观模拟建模是一种很有前景的工具,可用于生成关于HIV-1治疗中最佳政策策略的证据,包括治疗效果、HIV-1传播和成本效益分析。