Abstract

IntroductionSeveral HIV risk scores have been developed to identify individuals for prioritized HIV prevention in sub‐Saharan Africa. We systematically reviewed HIV risk scores to: (1) identify factors that consistently predicted incident HIV infection, (2) review inclusion of community‐level HIV risk in predictive models and (3) examine predictive performance.MethodsWe searched nine databases from inception until 15 February 2021 for studies developing and/or validating HIV risk scores among the heterosexual adult population in sub‐Saharan Africa. Studies not prospectively observing seroconversion or recruiting only key populations were excluded. Record screening, data extraction and critical appraisal were conducted in duplicate. We used random‐effects meta‐analysis to summarize hazard ratios and the area under the receiver‐operating characteristic curve (AUC‐ROC).ResultsFrom 1563 initial search records, we identified 14 risk scores in 13 studies. Seven studies were among sexually active women using contraceptives enrolled in randomized‐controlled trials, three among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) and three among cohorts enrolling both men and women. Consistently identified HIV prognostic factors among women were younger age (pooled adjusted hazard ratio: 1.62 [95% confidence interval: 1.17, 2.23], compared to above 25), single/not cohabiting with primary partners (2.33 [1.73, 3.13]) and having sexually transmitted infections (STIs) at baseline (HSV‐2: 1.67 [1.34, 2.09]; curable STIs: 1.45 [1.17; 1.79]). Among AGYW, only STIs were consistently associated with higher incidence, but studies were limited (n = 3). Community‐level HIV prevalence or unsuppressed viral load strongly predicted incidence but was only considered in 3 of 11 multi‐site studies. The AUC‐ROC ranged from 0.56 to 0.79 on the model development sets. Only the VOICE score was externally validated by multiple studies, with pooled AUC‐ROC 0.626 [0.588, 0.663] (I 2: 64.02%).ConclusionsYounger age, non‐cohabiting and recent STIs were consistently identified as predicting future HIV infection. Both community HIV burden and individual factors should be considered to quantify HIV risk. However, HIV risk scores had only low‐to‐moderate discriminatory ability and uncertain generalizability, limiting their programmatic utility. Further evidence on the relative value of specific risk factors, studies populations not restricted to “at‐risk” individuals and data outside South Africa will improve the evidence base for risk differentiation in HIV prevention programmes.PROSPERO NumberCRD42021236367

Highlights

  • Several HIV risk scores have been developed to identify individuals for prioritized HIV prevention in subSaharan Africa

  • Database searches identified 2029 records; 466 duplicates were removed and 1563 titles and/or abstracts were screened, of which 25 studies were retained for full-text screening

  • One additional conference abstract was available after initial screening, resulting in 13 studies (9 peer-reviewed articles, 2 posters, 1 editorial letter and 1 abstract) that met the inclusion criteria and were included in this review (Figure 1) [8,9,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34]

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Summary

Introduction

Conclusions: Younger age, non-cohabiting and recent STIs were consistently identified as predicting future HIV infection Both community HIV burden and individual factors should be considered to quantify HIV risk. Differentiating HIV prevention based on risk of infection is especially important for interventions that are expensive and intensive for both the client and the health system, such as daily oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) [2,3,4,5] Identifying those at highest risk for infection is most difficult in sub-Saharan Africa, where 58% of the 1.5 million global new infections in 2020 occurred [6], and a large proportion of new infections were through heterosexual transmission among the general population [7].

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