Institute for Global Health, UCL, London, UK.
Burnet Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2019 Jul;22(7):e25325. doi: 10.1002/jia2.25325.
As prevalence of undiagnosed HIV declines, it is unclear whether testing programmes will be cost-effective. To guide their HIV testing programmes, countries require appropriate metrics that can be measured. The cost-per-diagnosis is potentially a useful metric.
We simulated a series of setting-scenarios for adult HIV epidemics and ART programmes typical of settings in southern Africa using an individual-based model and projected forward from 2018 under two policies: (i) a minimum package of "core" testing (i.e. testing in pregnant women, for diagnosis of symptoms, in sex workers, and in men coming forward for circumcision) is conducted, and (ii) core-testing as above plus additional testing beyond this ("additional-testing"), for which we specify different rates of testing and various degrees to which those with HIV are more likely to test than those without HIV. We also considered a plausible range of unit test costs. The aim was to assess the relationship between cost-per-diagnosis and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of the additional-testing policy. The discount rate used in the base case was 3% per annum (costs in 2018 U.S. dollars).
There was a strong graded relationship between the cost-per-diagnosis and the ICER. Overall, the ICER was below $500 per-DALY-averted (the cost-effectiveness threshold used in primary analysis) so long as the cost-per-diagnosis was below $315. This threshold cost-per-diagnosis was similar according to epidemic and programmatic features including the prevalence of undiagnosed HIV, the HIV incidence and a measure of HIV programme quality (the proportion of HIV diagnosed people having a viral load <1000 copies/mL). However, restricting to women, additional-testing did not appear cost-effective even at a cost-per-diagnosis of below $50, while restricting to men additional-testing was cost-effective up to a cost-per-diagnosis of $585. The threshold cost per diagnosis for testing in men to be cost-effective fell to $256 when the cost-effectiveness threshold was $300 instead of $500, and to $81 when considering a discount rate of 10% per annum.
For testing programmes in low-income settings in southern African there is an extremely strong relationship between the cost-per-diagnosis and the cost-per-DALY averted, indicating that the cost-per-diagnosis can be used to monitor the cost-effectiveness of testing programmes.
随着未确诊的 HIV 流行率下降,检测项目是否具有成本效益尚不清楚。为了指导其 HIV 检测项目,各国需要能够衡量的适当指标。每诊断一例的成本可能是一个有用的指标。
我们使用基于个体的模型模拟了一系列南非地区成人 HIV 流行和 ART 项目的情景,并根据以下两种政策从 2018 年开始进行预测:(i)实施“核心”检测的最低方案(即对孕妇、症状诊断、性工作者和接受割礼的男性进行检测),(ii)上述核心检测加上额外的检测(即“额外检测”),我们指定了不同的检测率以及具有 HIV 的人比没有 HIV 的人更有可能接受检测的程度。我们还考虑了单位检测成本的合理范围。目的是评估每诊断一例的成本与额外检测政策的增量成本效益比(ICER)之间的关系。基本案例中使用的贴现率为每年 3%(以 2018 年美元计算)。
每诊断一例的成本与 ICER 之间存在很强的分级关系。总体而言,只要每诊断一例的成本低于 315 美元,每例残疾调整生命年(DALY)的增量成本效益比(ICER)就低于 500 美元(这是主要分析中使用的成本效益阈值)。根据流行情况和项目特征,包括未确诊 HIV 的流行率、HIV 发病率和 HIV 项目质量的衡量标准(诊断出的 HIV 患者中病毒载量<1000 拷贝/ml 的比例),这个阈值成本是相似的。然而,仅针对女性,即使每诊断一例的成本低于 50 美元,额外检测也不具有成本效益,而仅针对男性,每诊断一例的成本高达 585 美元,额外检测才具有成本效益。当使用 300 美元而不是 500 美元作为成本效益阈值,或考虑每年 10%的贴现率时,男性检测的成本效益阈值降低到每诊断一例 256 美元和 81 美元。
对于南部非洲低收入国家的检测项目,每诊断一例的成本与每例残疾调整生命年(DALY)的成本节约之间存在极强的关系,这表明每诊断一例的成本可以用来监测检测项目的成本效益。