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Modeling HIV-HCV coinfection epidemiology in the direct-acting antiviral era: the road to elimination.

Authors :
Virlogeux, Victor
Zoulim, Fabien
Pugliese, Pascal
Poizot-Martin, Isabelle
Valantin, Marc-Antoine
Cuzin, Lise
Reynes, Jacques
Billaud, Eric
Huleux, Thomas
Bani-Sadr, Firouze
Rey, David
Frésard, Anne
Jacomet, Christine
Duvivier, Claudine
Cheret, Antoine
Hustache-Mathieu, Laurent
Hoen, Bruno
Cabié, André
Cotte, Laurent
Dat’AIDS Study Group
Source :
BMC Medicine. 12/18/2017, Vol. 15, p1-11. 11p. 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>HCV treatment uptake has drastically increased in HIV-HCV coinfected patients in France since direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment approval, resulting in HCV cure in 63% of all HIV-HCV patients by the end of 2015. We investigated the impact of scaling-up DAA on HCV prevalence in the whole HIV population and in various risk groups over the next 10 years in France using a transmission dynamic compartmental model.<bold>Methods: </bold>The model was based on epidemiological data from the French Dat'AIDS cohort. Eight risk groups were considered, including high-risk (HR) and low-risk (LR) men who have sex with men (MSM) and male/female heterosexuals, intra-venous drug users, or patients from other risk groups. The model was calibrated on prevalence and incidence data observed in the cohort between 2012 and 2015.<bold>Results: </bold>On January 1, 2016, 156,811 patients were registered as infected with HIV in France (24,900 undiagnosed patients) of whom 7938 (5.1%) had detectable HCV-RNA (722 undiagnosed patients). Assuming a treatment coverage (TC) rate of 30%/year (i.e., the observed rate in 2015), model projections showed that HCV prevalence among HIV patients is expected to drop to 0.81% in 2026. Sub-analyses showed a similar decrease of HIV-HCV prevalence in most risk groups, including LR MSM. Due to higher infection and reinfection rates, predicted prevalence in HR MSM remained stable from 6.96% in 2016 to 6.34% in 2026. Increasing annual TC rate in HR MSM to 50/70% would decrease HCV prevalence in this group to 2.35/1.25% in 2026. With a 30% TC rate, undiagnosed patients would account for 34% of HCV infections in 2026.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Our model suggests that DAA could nearly eliminate coinfection in France within 10 years for most risk groups, including LR MSM. Elimination in HR MSM will require increased TC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17417015
Volume :
15
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
BMC Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126966129
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-017-0979-1