Total Results: 4
Levin, Zachary; Chang, Jessica; Karaca-Mandic, Pinar; Duarte-García, Alí; Jeffery, Molly Moore
2022.
Characteristics of Hydroxychloroquine Dispensing in the United States, January to May 2020.
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Krebs, Emanuel; Enns, Eva; Zang, Xiao; Mah, Cassandra S.; Quan, Amanda M.; Behrends, Czarina N.; Coljin, Caroline; Goedel, William; Golden, Matthew; Marshall, Brandon D.L.; Metsch, Lisa R.; Pandya, Ankur; Shoptaw, Steven; Sullivan, Patrick; Tookes, Hansel E.; Duarte, Horacio A.; Min, Jeong E.; Nosyk, Bohdan
2021.
Attributing health benefits to preventing HIV infections versus improving health outcomes among people living with HIV: an analysis in six US cities.
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OBJECTIVE: Combination strategies generate health benefits through improved health outcomes among people living with HIV (PLHIV) and prevention of new infections. We aimed to determine health benefits attributable to improved health among PLHIV versus HIV prevention for a set of combination strategies in six US cities. DESIGN: A dynamic HIV transmission model. METHODS: Using a model calibrated for Atlanta, Baltimore, Los Angeles, Miami, New York City (NYC) and Seattle, we assessed the health benefits of city-specific optimal combinations of evidence-based interventions implemented at publicly documented levels and at ideal (90% coverage) scale-up (2020-2030 implementation, 20-year study period). We calculated the proportion of health benefit gains (measured as quality-adjusted life-years) resulting from averted and delayed HIV infections; improved health outcomes among PLHIV; and improved health outcomes due to medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD). RESULTS: The HIV-specific proportion of total benefits ranged from 68.3% (95% credible interval: 55.3-80.0) in Seattle to 98.5% (97.5-99.3) in Miami, with the rest attributable to MOUD. The majority of HIV-specific health benefits in five of six cities were attributable HIV prevention, and ranged from 33.1% (26.1-41.1) in NYC to 83.1% (79.6-86.6) in Atlanta. Scaling up to ideal service levels resulted in three to seven-fold increases in additional health benefits, mostly from MOUD, with HIV-specific health gains primarily driven by HIV prevention. CONCLUSION: Optimal combination strategies generated a larger proportion of health benefits attributable to HIV prevention in five of six cities, underlining the substantial benefits of antiretroviral therapy engagement for the prevention of HIV transmission through viral suppression. Understanding to whom benefits accrue may be important in assessing the equity and impact of HIV investments.
Siriruchatanon, Mutita; Liu, Shan; Carlucci, James G.; Enns, Eva A.; Duarte, Horacio A.
2021.
Addressing pediatric hiv pretreatment drug resistance and virologic failure in sub-saharan africa: A cost-effectiveness analysis of diagnostic-based strategies in children ≥3 years old.
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Improvement of antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimen switching practices and implementation of pretreatment drug resistance (PDR) testing are two potential approaches to improve health outcomes for children living with HIV. We developed a microsimulation model of disease progression and treatment focused on children with perinatally acquired HIV in sub-Saharan Africa who initiate ART at 3 years of age. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of diagnostic-based strategies (improved switching and PDR testing), over a 10-year time horizon, in settings without and with pediatric dolutegravir (DTG) availability as first-line ART. The improved switching strategy increases the probability of switching to second-line ART when virologic failure is diagnosed through viral load testing. The PDR testing strategy involves a one-time PDR test prior to ART initiation to guide choice of initial regimen. When DTG is not available, PDR testing is dominated by the improved switching strategy, which has an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of USD 579/life-year gained (LY), relative to the status quo. If DTG is available, improved switching has a similar ICER (USD 591/LY) relative to the DTG status quo. Even when substantial financial investment is needed to achieve improved regimen switching practices, the improved switching strategy still has the potential to be cost-effective in a wide range of sub-Saharan African countries. Our analysis highlights the importance of strengthening existing laboratory monitoring systems to improve the health of children living with HIV.
Duarte, Horacio A.; Panpradist, Nuttada; Beck, Ingrid A.; Lutz, Barry; Lai, James; Kanthula, Ruth M.; Kantor, Rami; Tripathi, Anubhav; Saravanan, Shanmugam; Macleod, Iain J.; Chung, Michael H.; Zhang, Guoqing; Yang, Chunfu; Frenkel, Lisa M.
2017.
Current Status of Point-of-Care Testing for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Drug Resistance.
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Healthcare delivery has advanced due to the implementation of point-of-care testing, which is often performed within minutes to hours in minimally equipped laboratories or at home. Technologic advances are leading to point-of-care kits that incorporate nucleic acid-based assays, including polymerase chain reaction, isothermal amplification, ligation, and hybridization reactions. As a limited number of single-nucleotide polymorphisms are associated with clinically significant human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) drug resistance, assays to detect these mutations have been developed. Early versions of these assays have been used in research. This review summarizes the principles underlying each assay and discusses strategic needs for their incorporation into the management of HIV infection.
Total Results: 4