Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

medicine

Extent to which low-level use of antiretroviral treatment could curb the AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa

Lancet, Volume 355, No. 9221, Year 2000

Background: Despite growing international pressure to provide HIV-1 treatment to less-developed countries, potential demographic and epidemiological impacts have yet to be characterised. We modelled the future impact of antiretroviral use in South Africa from 2000 to 2005. Methods: We produced a population projection model that assumed zero antiretroviral use to estimate the future demographic impacts of the HIV-1 epidemic. We also constructed four antiretroviral-adjusted scenarios to estimate the potential effect of antiretroviral use. We modelled total drug cost, cost per life-year gained, and the proportion of per person health-care expenditure required to finance antiretroviral treatment in each scenario. Findings: With no antiretroviral use between 2000 and 2005, there will be about 276,000 cumulative HIV-1-positive births, 2,302,000 cumulative new AIDS cases, and the life expectancy at birth will be 46.6 years by 2005. By contrast, 110,000 HIV-1-positive births could be prevented by short-course antiretroviral prophylaxis, as well as a decline of up to 1 year of life expectancy. The direct drug costs of universal coverage for this intervention would be US$54 million - less than 0.001% of the per-person health-care expenditure. In comparison, triple-combination treatment for 25% of the HIV-1-positive population could prevent a 3.1-year decline in life expectancy and more than 430,000 incident AIDS cases. The drug costs of this intervention would, however, be more than $19 billion at present prices, and would require 12.5% of the country's per-person healthcare expenditure. Interpretation: Although there are barriers to widespread HIV-1 treatment, limited use of antiretrovirals could have an immediate and substantial impact on South Africa's AIDS epidemic.
Statistics
Citations: 62
Authors: 6
Affiliations: 3
Research Areas
Health System And Policy
Infectious Diseases
Study Design
Randomised Control Trial
Cross Sectional Study
Study Locations
South Africa