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Choice of time horizon critical in estimating costs and effects of changes to HIV programmes

McCreesh, Nicky; Andrianakis, Ioannis; Nsubuga, Rebecca N.; Strong, Mark; Vernon, Ian; McKinley, Trevelyan J.; Oakley, Jeremy E.; Goldstein, Michael; Hayes, Richard; White, Richard G.

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Authors

Nicky McCreesh

Ioannis Andrianakis

Rebecca N. Nsubuga

Mark Strong

Trevelyan J. McKinley

Jeremy E. Oakley

Michael Goldstein

Richard Hayes

Richard G. White



Abstract

Background: Uganda changed its antiretroviral therapy guidelines in 2014, increasing the CD4 threshold for antiretroviral therapy initiation from 350 cells/μl to 500 cells/μl. We investigate what effect this change in policy is likely to have on HIV incidence, morbidity, and programme costs, and estimate the cost-effectiveness of the change over different time horizons. Methods: We used a complex individual-based model of HIV transmission and antiretroviral therapy scale-up in Uganda. 100 model fits were generated by fitting the model to 51 demographic, sexual behaviour, and epidemiological calibration targets, varying 96 input parameters, using history matching with model emulation. An additional 19 cost and disability weight parameters were varied during the analysis of the model results. For each model fit, the model was run to 2030, with and without the change in threshold to 500 cells/μl. Results: The change in threshold led to a 9.7% (90% plausible range: 4.3%-15.0%) reduction in incidence in 2030, and averted 278,944 (118,452–502,790) DALYs, at a total cost of $28M (-$142M to +$195M). The cost per disability adjusted life year (DALY) averted fell over time, from $3238 (-$125 to +$29,969) in 2014 to $100 (-$499 to +$785) in 2030. The change in threshold was cost-effective (cost <3×Uganda’s per capita GDP per DALY averted) by 2018, and highly cost-effective (cost <Uganda’s per capita GDP per DALY averted) by 2022, for more than 50% of parameter sets. Conclusions: Model results suggest that the change in threshold is unlikely to have been cost-effective to date, but is likely to be highly cost-effective in Uganda by 2030. The time horizon needs to be chosen carefully when projecting intervention effects. Large amounts of uncertainty in our results demonstrates the need to comprehensively incorporate uncertainties in model parameterisation.

Citation

McCreesh, N., Andrianakis, I., Nsubuga, R. N., Strong, M., Vernon, I., McKinley, T. J., …White, R. G. (2018). Choice of time horizon critical in estimating costs and effects of changes to HIV programmes. PLoS ONE, 13(5), Article e0196480. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196480

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 13, 2018
Online Publication Date May 16, 2018
Publication Date May 16, 2018
Deposit Date May 31, 2018
Publicly Available Date May 31, 2018
Journal PLoS ONE
Publisher Public Library of Science
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 5
Article Number e0196480
DOI https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196480

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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Copyright Statement
© 2018 McCreesh et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.




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