Abstract
BackgroundIn recent years, safer conception strategies have been developed to help HIV-serodiscordant couples conceive a child without transmitting HIV to the seronegative partner. The SAFER clinical trial assessed implementation of these strategies in Zimbabwe.MethodsAs a part of the SAFER study, we estimated the costs (in 2017 $US) associated with individual and combination strategies, in the trial setting and real-world practice, from a healthcare system perspective. Safer conception strategies included: 1) ART with frequent viral load testing until achieving undetectable viral load (ART-VL); 2) daily oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP); 3) semen-washing with intrauterine insemination; and 4) manual self-insemination at home. For costs in the trial, we used a micro-costing approach, including a time and motion study to quantify personnel effort, and estimated the cost per couple for individual and combination strategies for a mean of 6 months of safer services. For real-world practice, we modeled costs for three implementation scenarios, representing differences from the trial in input prices (paid by the Ministry of Health and Child Care [MOHCC]), intervention intensity, and increments to current HIV prevention and treatment practices and guidelines. We used one-way sensitivity analyses to assess the impact of uncertainty in input variables.ResultsIndividual strategy costs were $769–$1615 per couple in the trial; $185–$563 if using MOHCC prices. Under the target intervention intensity and using MOHCC prices, individual strategy costs were $73–$360 per couple over and above the cost of current HIV clinical practices. The cost of delivering the most commonly selected combination, ART-VL plus PrEP, ranged from $166–$517 per couple under the three real-world scenarios. Highest costs were for personnel, lab tests, and strategy-specific consumables, in variable proportions by clinical strategy and analysis scenario. Total costs were most affected by uncertainty in the price of PrEP, number of semen-washing attempts, and scale-up of semen-washing capacity.ConclusionsSafer conception methods have costs that may be affordable in many low-resource settings. These cost data will help implementers and policymakers add safer conception services. Cost-effectiveness analysis is needed to assess value for money for safer conception services overall and for safer strategy combinations.Trial registrationRegistry Name: Clinicaltrials.gov. Trial registration number: NCT03049176. Registration date: February 9, 2017.
Highlights
In recent years, safer conception strategies have been developed to help Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-serodiscordant couples conceive a child without transmitting HIV to the seronegative partner
Though scale-up of antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV-infected persons has been extensively studied in Zimbabwe, and the roll-out of Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention in high-risk populations is underway [1,2,3,4], data on the estimated resources and costs associated with the delivery of safer conception strategies are lacking
Conception strategy selection A total of 23 HIV-discordant couples enrolled in SAFER during the cost data collection period
Summary
Safer conception strategies have been developed to help HIV-serodiscordant couples conceive a child without transmitting HIV to the seronegative partner. Safer conception strategies have been developed to help HIV-discordant couples (one partner has HIV while the other does not) conceive a child without transmitting HIV to the seronegative partner (and infant) [6, 7]. Though scale-up of ART for HIV-infected persons has been extensively studied in Zimbabwe, and the roll-out of PrEP for HIV prevention in high-risk populations is underway [1,2,3,4], data on the estimated resources and costs associated with the delivery of safer conception strategies are lacking.
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