Stichting HIV Monitoring, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College, London, United Kingdom.
Clin Infect Dis. 2018 Feb 10;66(5):743-750. doi: 10.1093/cid/cix858.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is expected to contribute a large noncommunicable disease burden among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected people. We quantify the impact of prevention interventions on annual CVD burden and costs among HIV-infected people in the Netherlands.
We constructed an individual-based model of CVD in HIV-infected people using national ATHENA (AIDS Therapy Evaluation in The Netherlands) cohort data on 8791 patients on combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). The model follows patients as they age, develop CVD (by incorporating a CVD risk equation), and start cardiovascular medication. Four prevention interventions were evaluated: (1) increasing the rate of earlier HIV diagnosis and treatment; (2) avoiding use of cART with increased CVD risk; (3) smoking cessation; and (4) intensified monitoring and drug treatment of hypertension and dyslipidemia, quantifying annual number of averted CVDs and costs.
The model predicts that annual CVD incidence and costs will increase by 55% and 36% between 2015 and 2030. Traditional prevention interventions (ie, smoking cessation and intensified monitoring and treatment of hypertension and dyslipidemia) will avert the largest number of annual CVD cases (13.1% and 20.0%) compared with HIV-related interventions-that is, earlier HIV diagnosis and treatment and avoiding cART with increased CVD risk (0.8% and 3.7%, respectively)-as well as reduce cumulative CVD-related costs. Targeting high-risk patients could avert the majority of events and costs.
Traditional CVD prevention interventions can maximize cardiovascular health and defray future costs, particularly if targeting high-risk patients. Quantifying additional public health benefits, beyond CVD, is likely to provide further evidence for policy development.
心血管疾病(CVD)预计将成为艾滋病毒(HIV)感染者中主要的非传染性疾病负担。我们量化了预防干预措施对荷兰 HIV 感染者的 CVD 负担和成本的影响。
我们使用国家 ATHENA(荷兰艾滋病治疗评估)队列中 8791 名接受联合抗逆转录病毒疗法(cART)的患者的数据,构建了 HIV 感染者 CVD 的基于个体的模型。该模型随着患者年龄的增长、发生 CVD(通过纳入 CVD 风险方程)以及开始心血管药物治疗来跟踪患者。评估了四种预防干预措施:(1)提高 HIV 的早期诊断和治疗率;(2)避免使用 CVD 风险增加的 cART;(3)戒烟;(4)加强高血压和血脂异常的监测和药物治疗,量化每年可预防的 CVD 数量和成本。
该模型预测,2015 年至 2030 年,每年 CVD 的发病率和成本将增加 55%和 36%。与 HIV 相关的干预措施(即早期 HIV 诊断和治疗以及避免 CVD 风险增加的 cART)相比,传统的预防干预措施(即戒烟和加强高血压和血脂异常的监测和治疗)将预防最大数量的年度 CVD 病例(分别为 13.1%和 20.0%),并降低累积 CVD 相关成本。针对高危患者可能会避免大多数事件和成本。
传统的 CVD 预防干预措施可以最大限度地提高心血管健康并降低未来的成本,特别是如果针对高危患者。量化 CVD 以外的额外公共卫生效益可能会为政策制定提供进一步的证据。