Impact of national commissioning of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) on equity of access in England: a PrEP-to-need ratio investigation.

IF 3.6 3区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Flavien Coukan, Ann Sullivan, Holly Mitchell, Sajjida Jaffer, Andy Williams, John Saunders, Christina Atchison, Helen Ward
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is highly effective in preventing HIV acquisition. In England, NHS availability was limited to participants of the PrEP Impact Trial until late 2020. Some key populations at greater risk of HIV were under-represented in the trial suggesting inequities in trial PrEP access. We used the PrEP-to-need ratio (PnR; number of PrEP users divided by new HIV diagnoses) to investigate whether PrEP access improved following routine commissioning in October 2020 and identify populations most underserved by PrEP.

Methods: Aggregated numbers of people receiving ≥1 PrEP prescription and non-late new HIV diagnoses (epidemiological proxy for PrEP need) were taken from national surveillance data sets. We calculated the PnR across socio-demographics during Impact (October 2017 to February 2020; pre-COVID-19 pandemic) and post-commissioning PrEP era (2021) in England.

Results: PnR increased >11 fold, from 4.2 precommissioning to 48.9 in 2021, due to a fourfold reduction in non-late new HIV diagnoses and near threefold increase in PrEP users. PnR increased across genders, however, the men's PnR increased 12-fold (from 5.4 precommissioning to 63.9 postcommissioning) while the women's increased sevenfold (0.5 to 3.5). This increasing gender-based inequity was observed across age, ethnicity and region of residence: white men had the highest PnR, increasing >13 fold (7.1 to 96.0), while Black African women consistently had the lowest PnR, only increasing slightly (0.1 to 0.3) postcommissioning, suggesting they were the most underserved group. Precommissioning, the PnR was 78-fold higher among white men than Black women, increasing to 278-fold postcommissioning.

Conclusions: Despite the overall increase in PrEP use, substantial PrEP Impact trial inequities widened postcommissioning in England, particularly across gender, ethnicity and region of residence. This study emphasises the need to guide HIV combination prevention based on equity metrics relative to the HIV epidemic. The PnR could support the optimisation of combination prevention to achieve zero new HIV infections in England by 2030.

英格兰全国性委托开展暴露前预防疗法 (PrEP) 对公平获取的影响:PrEP 需求比调查。
目的:艾滋病毒暴露前预防疗法(PrEP)在预防艾滋病毒感染方面非常有效。在英格兰,国家医疗服务体系只对 PrEP 影响试验的参与者开放,直到 2020 年底。一些感染 HIV 风险较高的关键人群在试验中的代表性不足,这表明在 PrEP 试验中存在不公平现象。我们使用 PrEP 与需求的比率(PnR;PrEP 使用者人数除以新的 HIV 诊断病例数)来调查在 2020 年 10 月常规委托之后,PrEP 的获取情况是否有所改善,并确定 PrEP 服务最不充分的人群:方法:我们从国家监测数据集中提取了接受≥1 次 PrEP 处方的总人数和非晚期新确诊的 HIV 感染者人数(PrEP 需求的流行病学代表)。我们计算了英格兰影响期(2017 年 10 月至 2020 年 2 月;COVID-19 流行前)和委托后 PrEP 时代(2021 年)不同社会人口的 PnR:由于非晚期新确诊的艾滋病毒感染者减少了四倍,而 PrEP 使用者增加了近三倍,因此 PnR 增加了 11 倍以上,从委托前的 4.2 增加到 2021 年的 48.9。然而,男性的 PnR 增加了 12 倍(从委托前的 5.4 增加到委托后的 63.9),而女性的 PnR 增加了 7 倍(从 0.5 增加到 3.5)。在不同年龄、种族和居住地区都可以观察到这种基于性别的不平等现象:白人男性的 PnR 最高,增长了 13 倍(从 7.1 到 96.0),而黑非洲女性的 PnR 一直最低,在委托后仅略有增长(从 0.1 到 0.3),这表明她们是服务最不充分的群体。委托前,白人男性的 PnR 是黑人女性的 78 倍,委托后增加到 278 倍:结论:尽管 PrEP 的使用率总体上有所提高,但在英格兰,PrEP 影响试验的不公平现象在委托后显著扩大,尤其是在性别、种族和居住地区方面。这项研究强调,有必要根据与艾滋病流行相关的公平指标来指导艾滋病综合预防。PnR 可为优化综合预防提供支持,以实现到 2030 年英格兰艾滋病新发感染率为零的目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Sexually Transmitted Infections 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
96
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Sexually Transmitted Infections is the world’s longest running international journal on sexual health. It aims to keep practitioners, trainees and researchers up to date in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of all STIs and HIV. The journal publishes original research, descriptive epidemiology, evidence-based reviews and comment on the clinical, public health, sociological and laboratory aspects of sexual health from around the world. We also publish educational articles, letters and other material of interest to readers, along with podcasts and other online material. STI provides a high quality editorial service from submission to publication.
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