Roberts Sarah T, Khanna Aditya S, Barnabas Ruanne V, Goodreau Steven M, Baeten Jared M, Celum Connie, Cassels Susan
Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA;
J Int AIDS Soc. 2016 May 11;19(1):20864. doi: 10.7448/IAS.19.1.20864. eCollection 2016.
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) prevents HIV transmission within HIV serodiscordant couples (SDCs), but slow implementation and low uptake has limited its impact on population-level HIV incidence. Home HIV testing and counselling (HTC) campaigns could increase ART uptake among SDCs by incorporating couples' testing and ART referral. We estimated the reduction in adult HIV incidence achieved by incorporating universal ART for SDCs into home HTC campaigns in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN), South Africa, and southwestern (SW) Uganda.
We constructed dynamic, stochastic, agent-based network models for each region. We compared adult HIV incidence after 10 years under three scenarios: (1) "Current Practice," (2) "Home HTC" with linkage to ART for eligible persons (CD4 <350) and (3) "ART for SDCs" regardless of CD4, delivered alongside home HTC.
ART for SDCs reduced HIV incidence by 38% versus Home HTC: from 1.12 (95% CI: 0.98-1.26) to 0.68 (0.54-0.82) cases per 100 person-years (py) in KZN, and from 0.56 (0.50-0.62) to 0.35 (0.30-0.39) cases per 100 py in SW Uganda. A quarter of incident HIV infections were averted over 10 years, and the proportion of virally suppressed HIV-positive persons increased approximately 15%.
Using home HTC to identify SDCs and deliver universal ART could avert substantially more new HIV infections than home HTC alone, with a smaller number needed to treat to prevent new HIV infections. Scale-up of home HTC will not diminish the effectiveness of targeting SDCs for treatment. Increasing rates of couples' testing, disclosure, and linkage to care is an efficient way to increase the impact of home HTC interventions on HIV incidence.
抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)可预防HIV血清学不一致伴侣(SDCs)之间的HIV传播,但实施缓慢和接受率低限制了其对人群层面HIV发病率的影响。家庭HIV检测与咨询(HTC)活动可通过纳入伴侣检测和ART转诊来提高SDCs对ART的接受率。我们估计了通过将针对SDCs的普遍ART纳入南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省(KZN)和乌干达西南部(SW)的家庭HTC活动中,成人HIV发病率的降低情况。
我们为每个地区构建了动态、随机、基于主体的网络模型。我们比较了三种情况下10年后的成人HIV发病率:(1)“当前做法”,(2)“家庭HTC”并为符合条件者(CD4<350)提供ART转诊,以及(3)“为SDCs提供ART”,无论CD4水平如何,与家庭HTC同时进行。
与家庭HTC相比,为SDCs提供ART使HIV发病率降低了38%:在KZN,每100人年(py)的发病率从1.12(95%CI:0.98 - 1.26)降至0.68(0.54 - 0.82)例,在SW乌干达,每100 py的发病率从0.56(0.50 - 0.62)降至0.35(0.30 - 0.39)例。在10年期间避免了四分之一的HIV新发感染,病毒得到抑制的HIV阳性者比例增加了约15%。
利用家庭HTC识别SDCs并提供普遍ART比单独的家庭HTC能避免更多新的HIV感染,预防新的HIV感染所需治疗的人数更少。扩大家庭HTC规模不会降低针对SDCs进行治疗的有效性。提高伴侣检测、信息披露和获得治疗的比例是增强家庭HTC干预对HIV发病率影响的有效途径。