Background The cost-effectiveness of early antiretroviral therapy (ART) in persons infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in serodiscordant couples is not known. Using a computer simulation of the progression of HIV infection and data from the HIV Prevention Trials Network 052 study, we projected the cost-effectiveness of early ART for such persons. Methods For HIV-infected partners in serodiscordant couples in South Africa and India, we compared the early initiation of ART with delayed ART. Five-year and lifetime outcomes included cumulative HIV transmissions, life-years, costs, and cost-effectiveness. We classified early ART as very cost-effective if its incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was less than the annual per capita gross domestic product (GDP; $8,100 in South Africa and $1,500 in India), as cost-effective if the ratio was less than three times the GDP, and as cost-saving if it resulted in a decrease in total costs and an increase in life-years, as compared with delayed ART. Results ...
CITATION STYLE
Walensky, R. P., Ross, E. L., Kumarasamy, N., Wood, R., Noubary, F., Paltiel, A. D., … Freedberg, K. A. (2013). Cost-Effectiveness of HIV Treatment as Prevention in Serodiscordant Couples. New England Journal of Medicine, 369(18), 1715–1725. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmsa1214720
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