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The impact of the program for medical male circumcision on HIV in South Africa: analysis using three epidemiological models

Background: South Africa began offering medical male circumcision (MMC) in 2010. We evaluated the current and future impact of this program to see if it is effective in preventing new HIV infections. Methods: The Thembisa, Goals and Epidemiological Modeling Software (EMOD) HIV transmission models we...

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Autores principales: Korenromp, Eline L., Bershteyn, Anna, Mudimu, Edina, Weiner, Renay, Bonecwe, Collen, Loykissoonlal, Dayanund, Manuhwa, Clarence, Pretorius, Carel, Teng, Yu, Stover, John, Johnson, Leigh F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7878969/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33615145
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13220.1
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author Korenromp, Eline L.
Bershteyn, Anna
Mudimu, Edina
Weiner, Renay
Bonecwe, Collen
Loykissoonlal, Dayanund
Manuhwa, Clarence
Pretorius, Carel
Teng, Yu
Stover, John
Johnson, Leigh F.
author_facet Korenromp, Eline L.
Bershteyn, Anna
Mudimu, Edina
Weiner, Renay
Bonecwe, Collen
Loykissoonlal, Dayanund
Manuhwa, Clarence
Pretorius, Carel
Teng, Yu
Stover, John
Johnson, Leigh F.
author_sort Korenromp, Eline L.
collection PubMed
description Background: South Africa began offering medical male circumcision (MMC) in 2010. We evaluated the current and future impact of this program to see if it is effective in preventing new HIV infections. Methods: The Thembisa, Goals and Epidemiological Modeling Software (EMOD) HIV transmission models were calibrated to South Africa’s HIV epidemic, fitting to household survey data on HIV prevalence, risk behaviors, and proportions of men circumcised, and to programmatic data on intervention roll-out including program-reported MMCs over 2009-2017. We compared the actual program accomplishments through 2017 and program targets through 2021 with a counterfactual scenario of no MMC program. Results: The MMC program averted 71,000-83,000 new HIV infections from 2010 to 2017. The future benefit of the circumcision already conducted will grow to 496,000-518,000 infections (6-7% of all new infections) by 2030. If program targets are met by 2021 the benefits will increase to 723,000-760,000 infections averted by 2030. The cost would be $1,070-1,220 per infection averted relative to no MMC. The savings from averted treatment needs would become larger than the costs of the MMC program around 2034-2039. In the Thembisa model, when modelling South Africa’s 9 provinces individually, the 9-provinces-aggregate results were similar to those of the single national model. Across provinces, projected long-term impacts were largest in Free State, KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga (23-27% reduction over 2017-2030), reflecting these provinces’ greater MMC scale-up. Conclusions: MMC has already had a modest impact on HIV incidence in South Africa and can substantially impact South Africa’s HIV epidemic in the coming years.
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spelling pubmed-78789692021-02-19 The impact of the program for medical male circumcision on HIV in South Africa: analysis using three epidemiological models Korenromp, Eline L. Bershteyn, Anna Mudimu, Edina Weiner, Renay Bonecwe, Collen Loykissoonlal, Dayanund Manuhwa, Clarence Pretorius, Carel Teng, Yu Stover, John Johnson, Leigh F. Gates Open Res Research Article Background: South Africa began offering medical male circumcision (MMC) in 2010. We evaluated the current and future impact of this program to see if it is effective in preventing new HIV infections. Methods: The Thembisa, Goals and Epidemiological Modeling Software (EMOD) HIV transmission models were calibrated to South Africa’s HIV epidemic, fitting to household survey data on HIV prevalence, risk behaviors, and proportions of men circumcised, and to programmatic data on intervention roll-out including program-reported MMCs over 2009-2017. We compared the actual program accomplishments through 2017 and program targets through 2021 with a counterfactual scenario of no MMC program. Results: The MMC program averted 71,000-83,000 new HIV infections from 2010 to 2017. The future benefit of the circumcision already conducted will grow to 496,000-518,000 infections (6-7% of all new infections) by 2030. If program targets are met by 2021 the benefits will increase to 723,000-760,000 infections averted by 2030. The cost would be $1,070-1,220 per infection averted relative to no MMC. The savings from averted treatment needs would become larger than the costs of the MMC program around 2034-2039. In the Thembisa model, when modelling South Africa’s 9 provinces individually, the 9-provinces-aggregate results were similar to those of the single national model. Across provinces, projected long-term impacts were largest in Free State, KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga (23-27% reduction over 2017-2030), reflecting these provinces’ greater MMC scale-up. Conclusions: MMC has already had a modest impact on HIV incidence in South Africa and can substantially impact South Africa’s HIV epidemic in the coming years. F1000 Research Limited 2021-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7878969/ /pubmed/33615145 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13220.1 Text en Copyright: © 2021 Korenromp EL et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Korenromp, Eline L.
Bershteyn, Anna
Mudimu, Edina
Weiner, Renay
Bonecwe, Collen
Loykissoonlal, Dayanund
Manuhwa, Clarence
Pretorius, Carel
Teng, Yu
Stover, John
Johnson, Leigh F.
The impact of the program for medical male circumcision on HIV in South Africa: analysis using three epidemiological models
title The impact of the program for medical male circumcision on HIV in South Africa: analysis using three epidemiological models
title_full The impact of the program for medical male circumcision on HIV in South Africa: analysis using three epidemiological models
title_fullStr The impact of the program for medical male circumcision on HIV in South Africa: analysis using three epidemiological models
title_full_unstemmed The impact of the program for medical male circumcision on HIV in South Africa: analysis using three epidemiological models
title_short The impact of the program for medical male circumcision on HIV in South Africa: analysis using three epidemiological models
title_sort impact of the program for medical male circumcision on hiv in south africa: analysis using three epidemiological models
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7878969/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33615145
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13220.1
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