Korenromp Eline L, Wi Teodora, Resch Stephen, Stover John, Broutet Nathalie
Avenir Health, Geneva, Switzerland / Glastonbury, Connecticut, United States of America.
World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 27;12(1):e0170773. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0170773. eCollection 2017.
In 2016 the World Health Assembly adopted the global strategy on Sexually Transmitted Infections (STI) 2016-2021 aiming to reduce curable STIs by 90% by 2030. We costed scaling-up priority interventions to coverage targets.
Strategy-targeted declines in Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Treponema pallidum and Trichomonas vaginalis were applied to WHO-estimated regional burdens at 2012. Syndromic case management was costed for these curable STIs, symptomatic Herpes Simplex Virus 2 (HSV-2), and non-STI vaginal syndromes, with incrementally expanding etiologic diagnosis. Service unit costs were multiplied with clinic attendances and people targeted for screening or prevention, by income tier. Human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccination and screening were costed for coverage increasing to 60% of 10-year-old girls for vaccination, and 60% of women 30-49 years for twice-lifetime screening (including clinical follow-up for positive screens), by 2021.
Strategy implementation will cost an estimated US$ 18.1 billion over 2016-2021 in 117 low- and middle-income countries. Cost drivers are HPV vaccination ($3.26 billion) and screening ($3.69 billion), adolescent chlamydia screening ($2.54 billion), and antenatal syphilis screening ($1.4 billion). Clinical management-of 18 million genital ulcers, 29-39 million urethral discharges and 42-53 million vaginal discharges annually-will cost $3.0 billion, including $818 million for service delivery and $1.4 billion for gonorrhea and chlamydia testing. Global costs increase from $2.6 billion to $ 4.0 billion over 2016-2021, driven by HPV services scale-up, despite vaccine price reduction. Sub-Saharan Africa, bearing 40% of curable STI burdens, covers 44% of global service needs and 30% of cost, the Western Pacific 15% of burden/need and 26% of cost, South-East Asia 20% of burden/need and 18% of cost.
Costs of global STI control depend on price trends for HPV vaccines and chlamydia tests. Middle-income and especially low-income countries need increased investment, innovative financing, and synergizing with other health programs.
2016年,世界卫生大会通过了《2016 - 2021年性传播感染全球战略》,目标是到2030年将可治愈的性传播感染减少90%。我们对扩大优先干预措施以达到覆盖目标的成本进行了估算。
将沙眼衣原体、淋病奈瑟菌、梅毒螺旋体和阴道毛滴虫的战略目标下降幅度应用于世卫组织对2012年区域负担的估计。对这些可治愈的性传播感染、有症状的单纯疱疹病毒2型(HSV - 2)和非性传播感染性阴道综合征进行了综合征病例管理成本估算,并逐步扩大病因诊断。服务单位成本乘以按收入层级划分的诊所就诊人数以及接受筛查或预防的人群数量。对人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗接种和筛查进行了成本估算,目标是到2021年将10岁女孩的疫苗接种覆盖率提高到60%,将30 - 49岁女性的终身两次筛查(包括对阳性筛查结果的临床随访)覆盖率提高到60%。
在117个低收入和中等收入国家,2016 - 2021年期间战略实施的估计成本为181亿美元。成本驱动因素包括HPV疫苗接种(32.6亿美元)和筛查(36.9亿美元)、青少年衣原体筛查(25.4亿美元)以及产前梅毒筛查(14亿美元)。每年对1800万例生殖器溃疡、2900 - 3900万例尿道分泌物和4200 - 5300万例阴道分泌物进行临床管理的成本将达到30亿美元,其中包括8.18亿美元的服务提供成本和14亿美元的淋病和衣原体检测成本。尽管疫苗价格下降,但由于HPV服务的扩大,2016 - 2021年全球成本从26亿美元增加到40亿美元。撒哈拉以南非洲承担了40%的可治愈性传播感染负担,占全球服务需求的44%和成本的30%;西太平洋承担15%的负担/需求和26%的成本;东南亚承担20%的负担/需求和18%的成本。
全球性传播感染控制的成本取决于HPV疫苗和衣原体检测的价格趋势。中等收入国家,尤其是低收入国家需要增加投资、创新融资,并与其他卫生项目协同合作。