Cost Effectiveness of Potential ART Adherence Monitoring Interventions in Sub-Saharan Africa
Authored by Andrew N Phillips, Valentina Cambiano, Fumiyo Nakagawa, Loveleen Bansi-Matharu, Papa Salif Sow, Peter Ehrenkranz, Deborah Ford, Owen Mugurungi, Tsitsi Apollo, Joseph Murungu, David R Bangsberg, Paul Revill
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0167654
Sponsors:
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background
Interventions based around objective measurement of adherence to
antiretroviral drugs for HIV have potential to improve adherence and to
enable differentiation of care such that clinical visits are reduced in
those with high adherence. It would be useful to understand the
approximate upper limit of cost that could be considered for such
interventions of a given effectiveness in order to be cost effective.
Such information can guide whether to implement an intervention in the
light of a trial showing a certain effectiveness and cost.
Methods
An individual-based model, calibrated to Zimbabwe, which incorporates
effects of adherence and resistance to antiretroviral therapy, was used
to model the potential impact of adherence monitoring-based
interventions on viral suppression, death rates, disability adjusted
life years and costs. Potential component effects of the intervention
were: enhanced average adherence when on ART, reduced risk of ART
discontinuation, and reduced risk of resistance acquisition. We
considered a situation in which viral load monitoring is not available
and one in which it is. In the former case, it was assumed that care
would be differentiated based on the adherence level, with fewer clinic
visits in those demonstrated to have high adherence. In the latter case, care was assumed to be primarily differentiated according to viral load
level. The maximum intervention cost required to be cost effective was
calculated based on a cost effectiveness threshold of \$500 per DALY
averted.
Findings
In the absence of viral load monitoring, an adherence monitoring-based
intervention which results in a durable 6\% increase in the proportion
of ART experienced people with viral load < 1000 cps/mL was cost
effective if it cost up to \$ 50 per person-year on ART, mainly driven
by the cost savings of differentiation of care. In the presence of viral
load monitoring availability, an intervention with a similar effect on
viral load suppression was cost-effective when costing \$23-\$32 per
year, depending on whether the adherence intervention is used to reduce
the level of need for viral load measurement.
Conclusion
The cost thresholds identified suggest that there is clear scope for
adherence monitoring-based interventions to provide net population
health gain, with potential cost-effective use in situations where viral
load monitoring is or is not available. Our results guide the
implementation of future adherence monitoring interventions found in
randomized trials to have health benefit.
Tags
patterns
Drug-resistance
South-africa
People
Viral load
Cohort
Active antiretroviral therapy
Middle-income countries
Virological failure
Hiv care