Optimizing HIV retesting during pregnancy and postpartum in four countries: a cost-effectiveness analysis.

Julianne Meisner ORCID logo; D Allen Roberts ORCID logo; PatriciaRodriguez; Monisha Sharma ORCID logo; MorkorNewman Owiredu; BerthaGomez; Maeve Bde Mello; AlexeyBobrik; ArkadiiVodianyk; AndrewStorey; +9 more... GeorgeGithuka; ThatoChidarikire; Ruanne Barnabas ORCID logo; ShizaFarid; ShaffiqEssajee; Muhammad S Jamil ORCID logo; RachelBaggaley; Cheryl Johnson ORCID logo; Alison L Drake ORCID logo; (2021) Optimizing HIV retesting during pregnancy and postpartum in four countries: a cost-effectiveness analysis. Journal of the International AIDS Society, 24 (4). e25686-. ISSN 1758-2652 DOI: 10.1002/jia2.25686
Copy

INTRODUCTION: HIV retesting during late pregnancy and breastfeeding can help detect new maternal infections and prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission (MTCT), but the optimal timing and cost-effectiveness of maternal retesting remain uncertain. METHODS: We constructed deterministic models to assess the health and economic impact of maternal HIV retesting on a hypothetical population of pregnant women, following initial testing in pregnancy, on MTCT in four countries: South Africa and Kenya (high/intermediate HIV prevalence), and Colombia and Ukraine (low HIV prevalence). We evaluated six scenarios with varying retesting frequencies from late in antenatal care (ANC) through nine months postpartum. We compared strategies using incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) over a 20-year time horizon using country-specific thresholds. RESULTS: We found maternal retesting once in late ANC with catch-up testing through six weeks postpartum was cost-effective in Kenya (ICER = $166 per DALY averted) and South Africa (ICER=$289 per DALY averted). This strategy prevented 19% (Kenya) and 12% (South Africa) of infant HIV infections. Adding one or two additional retests postpartum provided smaller benefits (1 to 2 percentage point increase in infections averted versus one retest). Adding three retests during the postpartum period averted additional infections (1 to 3 percentage point increase in infections averted versus one retest) but ICERs ($7639 and in Kenya and $11 985 in South Africa) greatly exceeded the cost-effectiveness thresholds. In Colombia and Ukraine, all retesting strategies exceeded the cost-effectiveness threshold and prevented few infant infections (up to 31 and 5 infections, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: In high HIV burden settings with MTCT rates similar to those seen in Kenya and South Africa, HIV retesting once in late ANC, with subsequent intervention, is the most cost-effective strategy for preventing infant HIV infections. In these settings, two HIV retests postpartum marginally reduced MTCT and were less costly than adding three retests. Retesting in low-burden settings with MTCT rates similar to Colombia and Ukraine was not cost-effective at any time point due to very low HIV prevalence and limited breastfeeding.



picture_as_pdf
jia2.25686.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

View Download

Explore Further

Read more research from the creator(s):

Find work associated with the faculties and division(s):

Find work from this publication: