Modeling Adherence Interventions Among Youth with HIV in the United States: Clinical and Economic Projections

Author:

Neilan Anne M.ORCID,Bangs Audrey C.,Hudgens Michael,Patel Kunjal,Agwu Allison L.,Bassett Ingrid V.,Gaur Aditya H.,Hyle Emily P.,Crespi Catherine M.,Horvath Keith J.,Dugdale Caitlin M.,Powers Kimberly A.,Rendina H. Jonathon,Weinstein Milton C.,Walensky Rochelle P.,Freedberg Kenneth A.,Ciaranello Andrea L.

Abstract

AbstractThe Adolescent Medicine Trials Network for HIV/AIDS Interventions is evaluating treatment adherence interventions (AI) to improve virologic suppression (VS) among youth with HIV (YWH). Using a microsimulation model, we compared two strategies: standard-of-care (SOC) and a hypothetical 12-month AI that increased cohort-level VS in YWH in care by an absolute ten percentage points and cost $100/month/person. Projected outcomes included primary HIV transmissions, deaths and life-expectancy, lifetime HIV-related costs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs, $/quality-adjusted life-year [QALY]). Compared to SOC, AI would reduce HIV transmissions by 15% and deaths by 12% at 12 months. AI would improve discounted life expectancy/person by 8 months at an added lifetime cost/person of $5,300, resulting in an ICER of $7,900/QALY. AI would be cost-effective at $2,000/month/person or with efficacies as low as a 1 percentage point increase in VS. YWH-targeted adherence interventions with even modest efficacy could improve life expectancy, prevent onward HIV transmissions, and be cost-effective.

Funder

Adolescent Medicine Trials Network for HIV/AIDS Interventions

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Eleanor and Miles Shore Scholars in Medicine Fellowship

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Massachusetts General Hospital Executive Committee on Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology

Reference74 articles.

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