Health Economics and Epidemiology Research Office, Department of Internal Medicine, School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Health Economics and Epidemiology Research Office, Department of Internal Medicine, School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; Department of Global Health, School of Public Health, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.
Lancet HIV. 2020 Apr;7(4):e294-e300. doi: 10.1016/S2352-3018(19)30344-3. Epub 2020 Jan 31.
Although large-scale provision of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is gaining momentum, no systematic method to evaluate or compare the effectiveness of different scale-up strategies in real-world settings exists. To date, estimating the effectiveness of PrEP has relied on clinical trials or mathematical models. We propose a novel and pragmatic metric to evaluate and compare programme effectiveness using routine implementation data. Using South African and Zambian PrEP guidelines, we provide two examples of how to consistently measure PrEP-programme effectiveness with routinely collected data. PrEP effectiveness should account for HIV seroconversion, the variable risk of HIV infection (seasons of risk) estimated with routine risk assessment at each clinic visit (when available), and the persistence of PrEP use. Three criteria should be met in order to be considered a successful outcome: first, a person who initiates PrEP must not seroconvert; second, there should be no more than one period at high risk of HIV infection during the follow-up period when not taking PrEP; and finally, an individual must continue to attend health-care visits or discontinue prophylaxis in consultation with a health-care provider within a specified follow-up period. The number of PrEP successes could then be compared with the total number of people initiating PrEP to establish a success ratio. This outcome is a useful and easily interpretable metric to monitor effectiveness of PrEP programmes with routinely collected clinical data and can be used in cost-effectiveness analyses. These measurements allow for comparisons of scale-up strategies for PrEP programmes and, if widely adopted, will allow comparative studies of different approaches for PrEP service delivery.
虽然大规模提供艾滋病毒暴露前预防(PrEP)正在取得进展,但在现实环境中,还没有系统的方法来评估或比较不同扩大规模策略的有效性。迄今为止,评估 PrEP 的有效性依赖于临床试验或数学模型。我们提出了一种新颖而实用的指标,使用常规实施数据来评估和比较计划的有效性。我们使用南非和赞比亚的 PrEP 指南,提供了两个如何使用常规收集的数据一致地衡量 PrEP 计划有效性的示例。PrEP 的有效性应考虑到 HIV 血清转换、每个诊所就诊时(在可用时)使用常规风险评估估计的 HIV 感染可变风险(风险季节),以及 PrEP 的持续使用。要被认为是成功的结果,需要满足三个标准:首先,开始接受 PrEP 的人不能血清转换;其次,在未服用 PrEP 的随访期间,不应有超过一个感染 HIV 的高风险期;最后,个人必须继续在规定的随访期内定期就诊或在与医疗保健提供者协商后停止预防。然后可以将 PrEP 的成功次数与开始接受 PrEP 的总人数进行比较,以确定成功率。这种结果是一种有用且易于解释的指标,可以监测使用常规收集的临床数据的 PrEP 计划的有效性,并可用于成本效益分析。这些测量允许对 PrEP 计划的扩大规模策略进行比较,如果广泛采用,将允许对不同的 PrEP 服务提供方法进行比较研究。