Blaizot Stéphanie, Maman David, Riche Benjamin, Mukui Irene, Kirubi Beatrice, Ecochard René, Etard Jean-François
Service de Biostatistique, Hospices Civils de Lyon, F-69003, Lyon, France.
Université de Lyon, F-69000, Lyon, France.
BMC Infect Dis. 2016 Apr 29;16:189. doi: 10.1186/s12879-016-1520-4.
Multiple prevention interventions, including early antiretroviral therapy initiation, may reduce HIV incidence in hyperendemic settings. Our aim was to predict the short-term impact of various single and combined interventions on HIV spreading in the adult population of Ndhiwa subcounty (Nyanza Province, Kenya).
A mathematical model was used with data on adults (15-59 years) from the Ndhiwa HIV Impact in Population Survey to compare the impacts on HIV prevalence, HIV incidence rate, and population viral load suppression of various interventions. These interventions included: improving the cascade of care (use of three guidelines), increasing voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC), and implementing pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use among HIV-uninfected women.
After four years, improving separately the cascade of care under the WHO 2013 guidelines and under the treat-all strategy would reduce the overall HIV incidence rate by 46 and 58 %, respectively, vs. the baseline rate, and by 35 and 49 %, respectively, vs. the implementation of the current Kenyan guidelines. With conservative and optimistic scenarios, VMMC and PrEP would reduce the HIV incidence rate by 15-25 % and 22-28 % vs. the baseline, respectively. Combining the WHO 2013 guidelines with VMMC would reduce the HIV incidence rate by 35-56 % and combining the treat-all strategy with VMMC would reduce it by 49-65 %. Combining the WHO 2013 guidelines, VMMC, and PrEP would reduce the HIV incidence rate by 46-67 %.
The impacts of the WHO 2013 guidelines and the treat-all strategy were relatively close; their implementation is desirable to reduce HIV spread. Combining several strategies is promising in adult populations of hyperendemic areas but requires regular, reliable, and costly monitoring.
包括早期启动抗逆转录病毒疗法在内的多种预防干预措施,可能会降低高流行地区的艾滋病毒发病率。我们的目的是预测各种单一及联合干预措施对肯尼亚尼安萨省恩迪瓦分区成年人口中艾滋病毒传播的短期影响。
使用一个数学模型,结合恩迪瓦人口艾滋病毒影响调查中成年人(15 - 59岁)的数据,比较各种干预措施对艾滋病毒流行率、艾滋病毒发病率以及人群病毒载量抑制的影响。这些干预措施包括:改善治疗流程(采用三项指南)、增加自愿男性包皮环切术(VMMC)以及在未感染艾滋病毒的女性中实施暴露前预防(PrEP)。
四年后,分别按照世界卫生组织2013年指南和全面治疗策略改善治疗流程,与基线发病率相比,总体艾滋病毒发病率将分别降低46%和58%,与实施当前肯尼亚指南相比,将分别降低35%和49%。在保守和乐观的情况下,与基线相比,VMMC和PrEP将分别使艾滋病毒发病率降低15% - 25%和22% - 28%。将世界卫生组织2013年指南与VMMC相结合,将使艾滋病毒发病率降低35% - 56%,将全面治疗策略与VMMC相结合,将使其降低49% - 65%。将世界卫生组织2013年指南、VMMC和PrEP相结合,将使艾滋病毒发病率降低46% - 67%。
世界卫生组织2013年指南和全面治疗策略的影响相对接近;实施这些措施有助于减少艾滋病毒传播。在高流行地区的成年人群中,联合多种策略很有前景,但需要定期、可靠且成本高昂的监测。