TY - JOUR
T1 - Modelling the impact of HIV and hepatitis C virus prevention and treatment interventions among people who inject drugs in Kenya
AU - Stone, Jack
AU - Fraser, Hannah
AU - Walker, Josephine G.
AU - Mafirakureva, Nyashadzaishe
AU - Mundia, Bernard
AU - Cleland, Charles
AU - Bartilol, Kigen
AU - Musyoki, Helgar
AU - Waruiru, Wanjiru
AU - Ragi, Allan
AU - Bhattacharjee, Parinita
AU - Chhun, Nok
AU - Lizcano, John
AU - Akiyama, Matthew J.
AU - Cherutich, Peter
AU - Wisse, Ernst
AU - Kurth, Ann
AU - Luhmann, Niklas
AU - Vickerman, Peter
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by the Global Fund East Africa Harm Reduction Project and Medicins du Monde. J.S., P.V., and H.F. acknowledge support from the NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Behavioural Science and Evaluation. P.V. acknowledges support from NAID/NIDA (R01AI147490). M.J.A. acknowledges support from NIDA (R00DA043011). Funding for study data provided from A.K. and P.C. was from NIDA 5R01DA032080.
Funding Information:
H.F. has received an honorarium from MSD unrelated to this research. P.V. and J.G.W. have received unrestricted research funding from Gilead unrelated to this work. All other authors have no disclosures.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/12/1
Y1 - 2022/12/1
N2 - Objectives:People who inject drugs (PWID) in Kenya have high HIV (range across settings: 14-26%) and hepatitis C virus (HCV; 11-36%) prevalence. We evaluated the impact of existing and scaled-up interventions on HIV and HCV incidence among PWID in Kenya.Design:HIV and HCV transmission model among PWID, calibrated to Nairobi and Kenya's Coastal region.Methods:For each setting, we projected the impact (percent of HIV/HCV infections averted in 2020) of existing coverages of antiretroviral therapy (ART; 63-79%), opioid agonist therapy (OAT; 8-13%) and needle and syringe programmes (NSP; 45-61%). We then projected the impact (reduction in HIV/HCV incidence over 2021-2030), of scaling-up harm reduction [Full harm reduction ('Full HR'): 50% OAT, 75% NSP] and/or HIV (UNAIDS 90-90-90) and HCV treatment (1000 PWID over 2021-2025) and reducing sexual risk (by 25/50/75%). We estimated HCV treatment levels needed to reduce HCV incidence by 90% by 2030.Results:In 2020, OAT and NSP averted 46.0-50.8% (range of medians) of HIV infections and 50.0-66.1% of HCV infections, mostly because of NSP. ART only averted 12.9-39.8% of HIV infections because of suboptimal viral suppression (28-48%). Full HR and ART could reduce HIV incidence by 51.5-64% and HCV incidence by 84.6-86.6% by 2030. Also halving sexual risk could reduce HIV incidence by 68.0-74.1%. Alongside full HR, treating 2244 PWID over 2021-2025 could reduce HCV incidence by 90% by 2030.Conclusion:Existing interventions are having substantial impact on HIV and HCV transmission in Kenya. However, to eliminate HIV and HCV, further scale-up is needed with reductions in sexual risk and HCV treatment.
AB - Objectives:People who inject drugs (PWID) in Kenya have high HIV (range across settings: 14-26%) and hepatitis C virus (HCV; 11-36%) prevalence. We evaluated the impact of existing and scaled-up interventions on HIV and HCV incidence among PWID in Kenya.Design:HIV and HCV transmission model among PWID, calibrated to Nairobi and Kenya's Coastal region.Methods:For each setting, we projected the impact (percent of HIV/HCV infections averted in 2020) of existing coverages of antiretroviral therapy (ART; 63-79%), opioid agonist therapy (OAT; 8-13%) and needle and syringe programmes (NSP; 45-61%). We then projected the impact (reduction in HIV/HCV incidence over 2021-2030), of scaling-up harm reduction [Full harm reduction ('Full HR'): 50% OAT, 75% NSP] and/or HIV (UNAIDS 90-90-90) and HCV treatment (1000 PWID over 2021-2025) and reducing sexual risk (by 25/50/75%). We estimated HCV treatment levels needed to reduce HCV incidence by 90% by 2030.Results:In 2020, OAT and NSP averted 46.0-50.8% (range of medians) of HIV infections and 50.0-66.1% of HCV infections, mostly because of NSP. ART only averted 12.9-39.8% of HIV infections because of suboptimal viral suppression (28-48%). Full HR and ART could reduce HIV incidence by 51.5-64% and HCV incidence by 84.6-86.6% by 2030. Also halving sexual risk could reduce HIV incidence by 68.0-74.1%. Alongside full HR, treating 2244 PWID over 2021-2025 could reduce HCV incidence by 90% by 2030.Conclusion:Existing interventions are having substantial impact on HIV and HCV transmission in Kenya. However, to eliminate HIV and HCV, further scale-up is needed with reductions in sexual risk and HCV treatment.
KW - HIV
KW - Kenya
KW - hepatitis C virus
KW - mathematical modelling
KW - people who inject drugs
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U2 - 10.1097/QAD.0000000000003382
DO - 10.1097/QAD.0000000000003382
M3 - Article
C2 - 36111533
AN - SCOPUS:85142400603
VL - 36
SP - 2191
EP - 2201
JO - AIDS
JF - AIDS
SN - 0269-9370
IS - 15
ER -