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Using longitudinal, population-based HIV surveillance to measure the real-world impacts of ART scale-up in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Frank Tanser Presentation at IAS, Melbourne, Australia 22 nd July 2014. Outline. Background ART coverage and risk of HIV acquisition

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  1. Using longitudinal, population-based HIV surveillance to measure the real-world impacts of ART scale-up in KwaZulu-Natal, South AfricaFrank TanserPresentation at IAS, Melbourne, Australia22nd July 2014

  2. Outline • Background • ART coverage and risk of HIV acquisition • Population viral load

  3. Global ART scale-up South Africa has the worldwide largest absolute number of patients on ART, >1.6 million by some estimates UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic 2012; WHO Universal Access Report 2013; Aaron Motsoaledi 2012

  4. Hlabisa sub-district, with the Africa Centre surveillance area and the TasP trial area

  5. The Africa Centre Africa Centre for Health and Population Studies

  6. Adult life expectancy over time 13,060 deaths among 101,286 individuals aged 15 years and older, contributing a total of 651,350 person-years of follow-up time Bor, Herbst, Newell, and BärnighausenScience 2013

  7. HIV incidence by age and sex 2004-2010 Females Males Tanser, Bärnighausen, Newell CROI 2011

  8. 80% life-time risk of acquiring HIV

  9. Spatial clustering of new HIV infections Tanser et al CROI. Boston, MA; 2011.

  10. Distribution of sero-conversions Tanser et al CROI. Boston, MA; 2011.

  11. Outline • Background • ART coverage and risk of HIV acquisition • Population viral load

  12. Population-based HIV surveillance • Since 2003: Population-based HIV cohort • Longitudinal, dynamic cohort • Entire adult population living in a contiguous geographical area of 438 km2 eligible for testing • Annual rounds • 75% of those observed to be HIV-uninfected subsequently retest • All individuals geo-located Tanser, Hosegood, Bärnighausen et al. International Journal of Epidemiology 2007

  13. 26237 26232 26241 26238 26233 26235 26240 26236 26239 26234 26231 26243 26242 26244

  14. Population impact of ART coverage on risk of HIV acquisition (2004-2012) Survival analysis > 17,000 HIV-negative individuals followed-up for HIV acquisition over 60,558 person-years 1,573 HIV sero-conversions Time- (and space-) varying demographic, sexual behavior, economic and geographic controls, including HIV prevalence p=0.171 P<0.0001 p<0.0001 P<0.0001 Adjusted for age, sex, community-level HIV prevalence, urban vs. rural locale, marital status, >1 partner in last 12 months, and household wealth index

  15. Conclusion • We find continued reductions in risk of acquiring HIV infection with increasing ART coverage in this typical rural sub-Saharan African setting • However, there is suggestion of a “reduction saturation” effect (at coverage of >40%) under treatment guidelines of <350 CD4+ cells/µl

  16. Outline • Background • ART coverage and risk of HIV acquisition • Population viral load

  17. Population/Community viral load • Proposed as: • an aggregate measure of the potential for ongoing HIV transmission within a community • as a surveillance measure for monitoring uptake and effectiveness of antiretroviral therapy.

  18. Figure 1 CVL as a measure for assessment of HIV treatment as prevention Miller, Powers, Smith et al Lancet Infectious Diseases 2013

  19. CVL as a measure for assessment of HIV treatment as prevention “ The issue of selection bias [in community viral load] could be addressed with a population-based survey in a clearly defined target population of all people in a community, including those with and without known HIV infection” Miller, Powers, Smith et al Lancet Infectious Diseases 2013

  20. Objectives • Asses whether viral loads in this population are randomly distributed in space or whether high or low viral loads tend to cluster in certain areas • Assess the degree to which different population viral load summary measures highlight known areas of high incidence • (Establish the degree to which different population viral load summary measures predict future risk of new HIV infection in uninfected individuals)

  21. Methods • All 2,456 individuals testing positive in a single round of the population-based HIV testing • Total number DBS specimens tested was 2,420 (36 specimens excluded due to being insufficient for testing). • Of these, 30% (726) were below the detectable limit of 1550 copies/ml(Viljoen et al, JAIDS 2010)

  22. Viral load distribution Median viral load = 6428 copies per ml

  23. Geometric mean population viral load Copies /ml

  24. Population prevalence of detectable virus (PPDV) Prevalence(%)

  25. Conclusion • To measure transmission potential of a community, any viral load summary index must take into account the size of the uninfected population • Population prevalence of detectable virus (PPDV) successfully identified known areas of continued high HIV incidence • We propose the PPDV as a simple community-level index of transmission potential

  26. Acknowledgements We thank the field staff at the Africa Centre for Health and Population Studies at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, for their work in collecting the data used in this study and the communities in the Africa Centre demographic surveillance area for their support and participation in this study. Co-authors Till Bärnighausen, DeenanPillay Funding Frank Tanser & Till Bärnighausen were supported by grant 1R01-HD058482-01 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA. Core funding for the Africa Centre's Demographic Surveillance Information System (GR065377/Z/01/H) and Population-based HIV Survey (GR065377/Z/01/B) was received from the Welcome Trust, UK.

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