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Title: Portfolios of biomedical HIV interventions in South Africa: a cost-effectiveness analysis. Author: Long EF, Stavert RR. Journal: J Gen Intern Med; 2013 Oct; 28(10):1294-301. PubMed ID: 23588668. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Recent clinical trials of male circumcision, oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), and a vaginal microbicide gel have shown partial effectiveness at reducing HIV transmission, stimulating interest in implementing portfolios of biomedical prevention programs. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of combination biomedical HIV prevention and treatment scale-up in South Africa, given uncertainty in program effectiveness. DESIGN: Dynamic HIV transmission and disease progression model with Monte Carlo simulation and cost-effectiveness analysis. PARTICIPANTS: Men and women aged 15 to 49 years in South Africa. INTERVENTIONS: HIV screening and counseling, antiretroviral therapy (ART), male circumcision, PrEP, microbicide, and select combinations. MAIN MEASURES: HIV incidence, prevalence, discounted costs, discounted quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. KEY RESULTS: Providing half of all uninfected persons with PrEP averts 28 % of future HIV infections for $9,000/QALY gained, but the affordability of such a program is questionable. Given limited resources, annual HIV screening and ART utilization by 75 % of eligible infected persons could avert one-third of new HIV infections, for approximately $1,000/QALY gained. Male circumcision is more cost-effective, but disproportionately benefits men. A comprehensive portfolio of expanded screening, ART, male circumcision, microbicides, and PrEP could avert 62 % of new HIV infections, reducing HIV prevalence from a projected 14 % to 10 % after 10 years. This strategy doubles treatment initiation and adds 31 million QALYs to the population. Despite uncertainty in program effectiveness, a comprehensive portfolio costs less than $10,000/QALY gained in 33 % of simulation iterations and less than $30,000/QALY gained in 90 % of iterations, assuming an annual microbicide cost of $100. CONCLUSIONS: A portfolio of modestly-effective biomedical HIV prevention programs, including male circumcision, vaginal microbicides, and oral PrEP, could substantially reduce HIV incidence and prevalence in South Africa and be likely cost-effective. Given limited resources, PrEP is the least cost-effective intervention of those considered.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]