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Cost-Effectiveness of Routine Rapid Human Immunodeficiency Virus Antibody Testing Before DNA-PCR Testing for Early Diagnosis of Infants in Resource-Limited Settings

Authors :
Nicolas A Menzies
Robert Downing
Jeannie Y. Chang Pitter
John Obonyo
John M. Blandford
Jordan W. Tappero
Christian Pitter
Jonathan Mermin
Thomas Finkbeiner
Adeodata Kekitiinwa
Jaco Homsy
Source :
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal. 28:819-825
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2009.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Infants born to HIV-infected women should receive HIV testing to allow early diagnosis and treatment. Recommendations for resource-limited settings stress laboratory-based virologic assays. While effective these tests are logistically complex and expensive. This study explored the cost-effectiveness of incorporating initial screening with rapid HIV tests (RHT) into the conventional testing algorithm to screen-out HIV-uninfected infants thereby reducing the need for costly virologic testing. METHODS: Data on HIV prevalence RHT sensitivity and specificity and costs were collected from 820 HIV-exposed children (1.5-18 months) attending 2 postnatal screening programs in Uganda during July 2005 to December 2006. Cost-effectiveness models compared the conventional testing algorithm DNA polymerase chain reaction (DNA-PCR with Roche Amplicor v1.5) with a modified algorithm (initial RHT to screen-out HIV-uninfected infants before DNA-PCR). RESULTS: The model estimated that the conventional algorithm would identify 94.3% (91.8%-94.7%) of HIV-infected infants compared with 87.8% (79.4%-90.5%) for a modified algorithm using RHT (HIV 1/2 Determine) and excluding the need for DNA-PCR for HIV antibody-negative infants. Costs per infant were $23.47 ($23.32-$23.76) for the conventional algorithm and between $22.75 ($21.89-$23.31) and $7.58 ($6.41-$10.75) for the modified algorithm depending on infant age and symptoms. Compared with the conventional algorithm costs per HIV-infected infant identified using the modified algorithm were higher in 1.5-to 3-month-old infants but significantly lower in 3-month-old and older infants. Models replicating the whole infant testing program showed the modified algorithm would have marginally lower sensitivity but would reduce total program costs by 27% to 40% producing an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $1489 ($686-$6781) for the conventional versus modified algorithms. CONCLUSIONS: Screening infants with RHT before DNA-PCR is cost-effective in infants 3 months old or older. Incorporating RHT into early infant testing programs could improve cost-effectiveness and reduce program costs.

Details

ISSN :
08913668
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....912eaa76aaed8ec53c57f1a17c1daadd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/inf.0b013e3181a3954b