BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, St Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada; Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, St Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada; Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
Lancet HIV. 2017 Jul;4(7):e303-e310. doi: 10.1016/S2352-3018(17)30045-0. Epub 2017 Mar 30.
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) and harm reduction services have been cited as key contributors to control of HIV epidemics; however, the specific contribution of ART has been questioned due to uncertainty of its true efficacy on HIV transmission through needle sharing. We aimed to isolate the independent effects of harm reduction services (opioid agonist treatment uptake and needle distribution volumes) and ART on HIV transmission via needle sharing in British Columbia, Canada, from 1996 to 2013.
We used comprehensive linked individual health administrative and registry data for the population of diagnosed people living with HIV in British Columbia to populate a dynamic, compartmental transmission model to simulate the HIV/AIDS epidemic in British Columbia from 1996 to 2013. We estimated HIV incidence, mortality, and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). We also estimated scenarios designed to isolate the independent effects of harm reduction services and ART, assuming 50% (10-90%) efficacy, in reducing HIV incidence through needle sharing, and we investigated structural and parameter uncertainty.
We estimate that 3204 (upper bound-lower bound 2402-4589) incident HIV cases were averted between 1996 and 2013 as a result of the combined effect of the expansion of harm reduction services and ART coverage on HIV transmission via needle sharing. In a hypothetical scenario assuming ART had zero effect on transmission through needle sharing, we estimated harm reduction services alone would have accounted for 77% (upper bound-lower bound 62-95%) of averted HIV incidence. In a separate hypothetical scenario where harm reduction services remained at 1996 levels, we estimated ART alone would have accounted for 44% (10-67%) of averted HIV incidence. As a result of high distribution volumes, needle distribution predominantly accounted for incidence reductions attributable to harm reduction but opioid agonist treatment provided substantially greater QALY gains.
If the true efficacy of ART in preventing HIV transmission through needle sharing is closer to its efficacy in sexual transmission, ART's effect on incident cases averted could be greater than that of harm reduction. Nonetheless, harm reduction services had a vital role in reducing HIV incidence in British Columbia, and should be viewed as essential and cost-effective tools in combination implementation strategies to reduce the public health and economic burden of HIV/AIDS.
BC Ministry of Health; National Institutes of Health (R01DA041747); Genome Canada (142HIV).
抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)和减少伤害服务被认为是控制 HIV 流行的关键因素;然而,由于对其在通过共用针头传播 HIV 方面的真实效果存在不确定性,ART 的具体效果受到了质疑。我们旨在从 1996 年到 2013 年,在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省分离出减少伤害服务(阿片类药物激动剂治疗的采用和针具分发量)和 ART 对通过共用针头传播 HIV 的独立影响。
我们使用不列颠哥伦比亚省诊断为 HIV 感染者的综合个人健康管理和登记数据,为不列颠哥伦比亚省 1996 年至 2013 年的动态、隔室传播模型提供数据,以模拟 HIV/AIDS 流行情况。我们估计了 HIV 发病率、死亡率和质量调整生命年(QALYs)。我们还估计了一些场景,假设减少伤害服务和 ART 通过降低通过共用针头传播 HIV 的风险,分别具有 50%(10-90%)的效果,以分离出减少伤害服务和 ART 对 HIV 发病率的独立影响,我们还研究了结构和参数不确定性。
我们估计,由于减少伤害服务和 ART 通过共用针头传播 HIV 的覆盖率的扩大,1996 年至 2013 年期间共避免了 3204 例(上限-下限 2402-4589)HIV 感染病例。在一个假设 ART 对通过共用针头传播没有效果的假设情景中,我们估计仅减少伤害服务就将占避免的 HIV 发病率的 77%(上限-下限 62-95%)。在另一个假设情景中,假设减少伤害服务保持在 1996 年的水平,我们估计仅 ART 将占避免的 HIV 发病率的 44%(10-67%)。由于分发量较高,针具分发主要导致了减少伤害服务归因于 HIV 发病率的降低,但阿片类药物激动剂治疗带来了更大的 QALY 收益。
如果 ART 在预防通过共用针头传播 HIV 方面的真实效果更接近其在性传播方面的效果,那么 ART 对避免的病例的影响可能会大于减少伤害服务。尽管如此,减少伤害服务在不列颠哥伦比亚省降低 HIV 发病率方面发挥了重要作用,应将其视为减少 HIV/AIDS 的公共卫生和经济负担的综合实施策略中不可或缺且具有成本效益的工具。
不列颠哥伦比亚省卫生部;美国国立卫生研究院(R01DA041747);加拿大基因组(142HIV)。