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Cross-sectional estimates revealed high HIV incidence in Botswana rural communities in the era of successful ART scale-up in 2013-2015

BACKGROUND: Botswana is close to reaching the UNAIDS “90-90-90” HIV testing, antiretroviral treatment (ART), and viral suppression goals. We sought to determine HIV incidence in this setting with both high HIV prevalence and high ART coverage. METHODS: We used a cross-sectional approach to assessing...

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Autores principales: Moyo, Sikhulile, Gaseitsiwe, Simani, Mohammed, Terence, Pretorius Holme, Molly, Wang, Rui, Kotokwe, Kenanao Peggy, Boleo, Corretah, Mupfumi, Lucy, Yankinda, Etienne Kadima, Chakalisa, Unoda, van Widenfelt, Erik, Gaolathe, Tendani, Mmalane, Mompati O., Dryden-Peterson, Scott, Mine, Madisa, Lebelonyane, Refeletswe, Bennett, Kara, Leidner, Jean, Wirth, Kathleen E., Tchetgen Tchetgen, Eric, Powis, Kathleen, Moore, Janet, Clarke, William A., Lockman, Shahin, Makhema, Joseph M., Essex, Max, Novitsky, Vlad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6200198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30356287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204840
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author Moyo, Sikhulile
Gaseitsiwe, Simani
Mohammed, Terence
Pretorius Holme, Molly
Wang, Rui
Kotokwe, Kenanao Peggy
Boleo, Corretah
Mupfumi, Lucy
Yankinda, Etienne Kadima
Chakalisa, Unoda
van Widenfelt, Erik
Gaolathe, Tendani
Mmalane, Mompati O.
Dryden-Peterson, Scott
Mine, Madisa
Lebelonyane, Refeletswe
Bennett, Kara
Leidner, Jean
Wirth, Kathleen E.
Tchetgen Tchetgen, Eric
Powis, Kathleen
Moore, Janet
Clarke, William A.
Lockman, Shahin
Makhema, Joseph M.
Essex, Max
Novitsky, Vlad
author_facet Moyo, Sikhulile
Gaseitsiwe, Simani
Mohammed, Terence
Pretorius Holme, Molly
Wang, Rui
Kotokwe, Kenanao Peggy
Boleo, Corretah
Mupfumi, Lucy
Yankinda, Etienne Kadima
Chakalisa, Unoda
van Widenfelt, Erik
Gaolathe, Tendani
Mmalane, Mompati O.
Dryden-Peterson, Scott
Mine, Madisa
Lebelonyane, Refeletswe
Bennett, Kara
Leidner, Jean
Wirth, Kathleen E.
Tchetgen Tchetgen, Eric
Powis, Kathleen
Moore, Janet
Clarke, William A.
Lockman, Shahin
Makhema, Joseph M.
Essex, Max
Novitsky, Vlad
author_sort Moyo, Sikhulile
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Botswana is close to reaching the UNAIDS “90-90-90” HIV testing, antiretroviral treatment (ART), and viral suppression goals. We sought to determine HIV incidence in this setting with both high HIV prevalence and high ART coverage. METHODS: We used a cross-sectional approach to assessing HIV incidence. A random, population-based sample of adults age 16–64 years was enrolled in 30 rural and peri-urban communities as part of the Botswana Combination Prevention Project (BCPP), from October 2013 –November 2015. Data and samples from the baseline household survey were used to estimate cross-sectional HIV incidence, following an algorithm that combined Limiting-Antigen Avidity Assay (LAg-Avidity EIA), ART status (documented or by testing ARV drugs in plasma) and HIV-1 RNA load. The LAg-Avidity EIA cut-off normalized optical density (ODn) was set at 1.5. The HIV-1 RNA cut-off was set at 400 copies/mL. For estimation purposes, the Mean Duration of Recent Infection was 130 days and the False Recent Rate (FRR) was evaluated at values of either 0 or 0.39%. RESULTS: Among 12,610 individuals participating in the baseline household survey, HIV status was available for 12,570 participants and 3,596 of them were HIV positive. LAg-Avidity EIA data was generated for 3,581 (99.6%) of HIV-positive participants. Of 326 participants with ODn ≤1.5, 278 individuals were receiving ART verified through documentation and were considered to represent longstanding HIV infections. Among the remaining 48 participants who reported no use of ART, 14 had an HIV-1 RNA load ≤400 copies/mL (including 3 participants with ARVs in plasma) and were excluded, as potential elite/viremic controllers or undisclosed ART. Thus, 34 LAg-Avidity-EIA-recent, ARV-naïve individuals with detectable HIV-1 RNA (>400 copies/mL) were classified as individuals with recent HIV infections. The annualized HIV incidence among 16–64 year old adults was estimated at 1.06% (95% CI 0.68–1.45%) with zero FRR, and at 0.64% (95% CI 0.24–1.04%) using a previously defined FRR of 0.39%. Within a subset of younger individuals 16–49 years old, the annualized HIV incidence was estimated at 1.29% (95% CI 0.82–1.77%) with zero FRR, and at 0.90% (95% CI 0.42–1.38%) with FRR set to 0.39%. CONCLUSIONS: Using a cross-sectional estimate of HIV incidence from 2013–2015, we found that at the time of near achievement of the UNAIDS 90-90-90 targets, ~1% of adults (age 16–64 years) in Botswana’s rural and peri-urban communities became HIV infected annually.
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spelling pubmed-62001982018-11-19 Cross-sectional estimates revealed high HIV incidence in Botswana rural communities in the era of successful ART scale-up in 2013-2015 Moyo, Sikhulile Gaseitsiwe, Simani Mohammed, Terence Pretorius Holme, Molly Wang, Rui Kotokwe, Kenanao Peggy Boleo, Corretah Mupfumi, Lucy Yankinda, Etienne Kadima Chakalisa, Unoda van Widenfelt, Erik Gaolathe, Tendani Mmalane, Mompati O. Dryden-Peterson, Scott Mine, Madisa Lebelonyane, Refeletswe Bennett, Kara Leidner, Jean Wirth, Kathleen E. Tchetgen Tchetgen, Eric Powis, Kathleen Moore, Janet Clarke, William A. Lockman, Shahin Makhema, Joseph M. Essex, Max Novitsky, Vlad PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Botswana is close to reaching the UNAIDS “90-90-90” HIV testing, antiretroviral treatment (ART), and viral suppression goals. We sought to determine HIV incidence in this setting with both high HIV prevalence and high ART coverage. METHODS: We used a cross-sectional approach to assessing HIV incidence. A random, population-based sample of adults age 16–64 years was enrolled in 30 rural and peri-urban communities as part of the Botswana Combination Prevention Project (BCPP), from October 2013 –November 2015. Data and samples from the baseline household survey were used to estimate cross-sectional HIV incidence, following an algorithm that combined Limiting-Antigen Avidity Assay (LAg-Avidity EIA), ART status (documented or by testing ARV drugs in plasma) and HIV-1 RNA load. The LAg-Avidity EIA cut-off normalized optical density (ODn) was set at 1.5. The HIV-1 RNA cut-off was set at 400 copies/mL. For estimation purposes, the Mean Duration of Recent Infection was 130 days and the False Recent Rate (FRR) was evaluated at values of either 0 or 0.39%. RESULTS: Among 12,610 individuals participating in the baseline household survey, HIV status was available for 12,570 participants and 3,596 of them were HIV positive. LAg-Avidity EIA data was generated for 3,581 (99.6%) of HIV-positive participants. Of 326 participants with ODn ≤1.5, 278 individuals were receiving ART verified through documentation and were considered to represent longstanding HIV infections. Among the remaining 48 participants who reported no use of ART, 14 had an HIV-1 RNA load ≤400 copies/mL (including 3 participants with ARVs in plasma) and were excluded, as potential elite/viremic controllers or undisclosed ART. Thus, 34 LAg-Avidity-EIA-recent, ARV-naïve individuals with detectable HIV-1 RNA (>400 copies/mL) were classified as individuals with recent HIV infections. The annualized HIV incidence among 16–64 year old adults was estimated at 1.06% (95% CI 0.68–1.45%) with zero FRR, and at 0.64% (95% CI 0.24–1.04%) using a previously defined FRR of 0.39%. Within a subset of younger individuals 16–49 years old, the annualized HIV incidence was estimated at 1.29% (95% CI 0.82–1.77%) with zero FRR, and at 0.90% (95% CI 0.42–1.38%) with FRR set to 0.39%. CONCLUSIONS: Using a cross-sectional estimate of HIV incidence from 2013–2015, we found that at the time of near achievement of the UNAIDS 90-90-90 targets, ~1% of adults (age 16–64 years) in Botswana’s rural and peri-urban communities became HIV infected annually. Public Library of Science 2018-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6200198/ /pubmed/30356287 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204840 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Moyo, Sikhulile
Gaseitsiwe, Simani
Mohammed, Terence
Pretorius Holme, Molly
Wang, Rui
Kotokwe, Kenanao Peggy
Boleo, Corretah
Mupfumi, Lucy
Yankinda, Etienne Kadima
Chakalisa, Unoda
van Widenfelt, Erik
Gaolathe, Tendani
Mmalane, Mompati O.
Dryden-Peterson, Scott
Mine, Madisa
Lebelonyane, Refeletswe
Bennett, Kara
Leidner, Jean
Wirth, Kathleen E.
Tchetgen Tchetgen, Eric
Powis, Kathleen
Moore, Janet
Clarke, William A.
Lockman, Shahin
Makhema, Joseph M.
Essex, Max
Novitsky, Vlad
Cross-sectional estimates revealed high HIV incidence in Botswana rural communities in the era of successful ART scale-up in 2013-2015
title Cross-sectional estimates revealed high HIV incidence in Botswana rural communities in the era of successful ART scale-up in 2013-2015
title_full Cross-sectional estimates revealed high HIV incidence in Botswana rural communities in the era of successful ART scale-up in 2013-2015
title_fullStr Cross-sectional estimates revealed high HIV incidence in Botswana rural communities in the era of successful ART scale-up in 2013-2015
title_full_unstemmed Cross-sectional estimates revealed high HIV incidence in Botswana rural communities in the era of successful ART scale-up in 2013-2015
title_short Cross-sectional estimates revealed high HIV incidence in Botswana rural communities in the era of successful ART scale-up in 2013-2015
title_sort cross-sectional estimates revealed high hiv incidence in botswana rural communities in the era of successful art scale-up in 2013-2015
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6200198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30356287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204840
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