HIV incidence, viremia, and the national response in Eswatini: Two sequential population-based surveys

Author:

Nkambule Rejoice,Philip Neena M.ORCID,Reid GilesORCID,Mnisi Zandile,Nuwagaba-Biribonwoha Harriet,Ao Tony T.,Ginindza Choice,Duong Yen T.,Patel Hetal,Saito Suzue,Solmo Chelsea,Brown Kristin,Moore Chiara S.,Voetsch Andrew C.,Bicego George,Bock Naomi,Mhlanga Fortune,Dlamini Tengetile,Mabuza Khanya,Zwane Amos,Sahabo Ruben,Dobbs Trudy,Parekh Bharat S.,El-Sadr Wafaa,Ryan Caroline,Justman Jessica

Abstract

With the highest HIV incidence and prevalence globally, the government of Eswatini started a substantial scale-up of HIV treatment and prevention services in 2011. Two sequential large population-based surveys were conducted before and after service expansion to assess the impact of the national response. Cross-sectional, household-based, nationally representative samples of adults, ages 18 to 49 years, were sampled in 2011 and 2016. We measured HIV prevalence, incidence (recent infection based on limiting antigen ≤1.5 optical density units and HIV RNA ≥1000 copies/mL), viral load suppression (HIV RNA <1000 copies/mL among all seropositive adults) and unsuppressed viremia (HIV RNA ≥1000 copies/mL among all, regardless of HIV status) and assessed for temporal changes by conducting a trend analysis of the log ratio of proportions, using a Z statistic distribution. HIV prevalence remained stable from 2011 to 2016 [32% versus 30%, p = 0.10]. HIV incidence significantly declined 48% [2.48% versus 1.30%, p = 0.01]. Incidence remained higher among women than men [2011: 3.16% versus 1.83%; 2016: 1.76% versus 0.86%], with a smaller but significant relative reduction among women [44%; p = 0.04] than men [53%; p = 0.09]. The proportion of seropositive adults with viral load suppression significantly increased from 35% to 71% [p < .001]. The proportion of the total adult population with unsuppressed viremia decreased from 21% to 9% [p < .001]. National HIV incidence in Eswatini decreased by nearly half and viral load suppression doubled over a five-year period. Unsuppressed viremia in the total population decreased 58%. These population-based findings demonstrate the national impact of expanded HIV services in a hyperendemic country.

Funder

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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