Impact and cost‐effectiveness of the national scale‐up of HIV pre‐exposure prophylaxis among female sex workers in South Africa: a modelling analysis

Author:

Stone Jack1ORCID,Bothma Rutendo2ORCID,Gomez Gabriela B.3,Eakle Robyn234,Mukandavire Christinah15,Subedar Hasina6,Fraser Hannah1ORCID,Boily Marie‐Claude5,Schwartz Sheree7,Coetzee Jenny8910,Otwombe Kennedy811,Milovanovic Minja810ORCID,Baral Stefan7ORCID,Johnson Leigh F.12ORCID,Venter Willem Daniel Francois13,Rees Helen2,Vickerman Peter1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Population Health Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

2. Wits RHI University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg South Africa

3. Department of Global Health and Development London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK

4. Office of HIV AIDS U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Washington DC USA

5. Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology Imperial College London London UK

6. National Department of Health Pretoria South Africa

7. Department of Epidemiology Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore Maryland USA

8. Perinatal HIV Research Unit Faculty of Health Sciences University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg South Africa

9. South African Medical Research Council Cape Town South Africa

10. African Potential Management Consultancy Kyalami South Africa

11. School of Public Health Faculty of Health Sciences University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg South Africa

12. Centre for Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Research University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

13. Ezintsha Faculty of Health Sciences University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg South Africa

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionIn 2016, South Africa (SA) initiated a national programme to scale‐up pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among female sex workers (FSWs), with ∼20,000 PrEP initiations among FSWs (∼14% of FSW) by 2020. We evaluated the impact and cost‐effectiveness of this programme, including future scale‐up scenarios and the potential detrimental impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic.MethodsA compartmental HIV transmission model for SA was adapted to include PrEP. Using estimates on self‐reported PrEP adherence from a national study of FSW (67.7%) and the Treatment and Prevention for FSWs (TAPS) PrEP demonstration study in SA (80.8%), we down‐adjusted TAPS estimates for the proportion of FSWs with detectable drug levels (adjusted range: 38.0–70.4%). The model stratified FSW by low (undetectable drug; 0% efficacy) and high adherence (detectable drug; 79.9%; 95% CI: 67.2–87.6% efficacy). FSWs can transition between adherence levels, with lower loss‐to‐follow‐up among highly adherent FSWs (aHR: 0.58; 95% CI: 0.40–0.85; TAPS data). The model was calibrated to monthly data on the national scale‐up of PrEP among FSWs over 2016–2020, including reductions in PrEP initiations during 2020. The model projected the impact of the current programme (2016–2020) and the future impact (2021–2040) at current coverage or if initiation and/or retention are doubled. Using published cost data, we assessed the cost‐effectiveness (healthcare provider perspective; 3% discount rate; time horizon 2016–2040) of the current PrEP provision.ResultsCalibrated to national data, model projections suggest that 2.1% of HIV‐negative FSWs were currently on PrEP in 2020, with PrEP preventing 0.45% (95% credibility interval, 0.35–0.57%) of HIV infections among FSWs over 2016–2020 or 605 (444–840) infections overall. Reductions in PrEP initiations in 2020 possibly reduced infections averted by 18.57% (13.99–23.29). PrEP is cost‐saving, with $1.42 (1.03–1.99) of ART costs saved per dollar spent on PrEP. Going forward, existing coverage of PrEP will avert 5,635 (3,572–9,036) infections by 2040. However, if PrEP initiation and retention doubles, then PrEP coverage increases to 9.9% (8.7–11.6%) and impact increases 4.3 times with 24,114 (15,308–38,107) infections averted by 2040.ConclusionsOur findings advocate for the expansion of PrEP to FSWs throughout SA to maximize its impact. This should include strategies to optimize retention and should target women in contact with FSW services.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

United States Agency for International Development

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference67 articles.

1. SAHMS‐FSW.South African Health Monitoring Survey (SAHMS): an integrated biological and behavioural survey among female sex workers South Africa 2013–2014.2014.

2. Cross-sectional study of female sex workers in Soweto, South Africa: Factors associated with HIV infection

3. Pregnancy Intentions and Safer Pregnancy Knowledge Among Female Sex Workers in Port Elizabeth, South Africa

4. HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis and early antiretroviral treatment among female sex workers in South Africa: Results from a prospective observational demonstration project

5. South African National AIDS Council.National strategic plan for HIV prevention care and treatment for sex workers.Pretoria South Africa;2013.

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1. ERRATUM;Journal of the International AIDS Society;2023-04

2. Pre-exposure prophylaxis use among female sex workers in Gulu city, Uganda: a community-based cross-sectional study;Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease;2023-01

3. Meta-synthesis of research dynamics on HIV/AIDs related pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP): Africa perspective;Journal of Medicine, Surgery, and Public Health;2023

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