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. 2011 Nov 7:288:9-20.
doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2011.08.001. Epub 2011 Aug 10.

Modeling the gender-specific impact of vaginal microbicides on HIV transmission

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Modeling the gender-specific impact of vaginal microbicides on HIV transmission

Dobromir T Dimitrov et al. J Theor Biol. .

Abstract

Vaginal microbicides (VMB) are currently among the few women-initiated biomedical interventions for preventing heterosexual transmission of HIV. In this paper we use a deterministic model of HIV transmission to assess the public-health benefits of a VMB intervention and evaluate its gender-specific impact over short (initial) and extended periods of time. We define two distinct quantitative benefit ratios (QBRs) based on infections prevented in men and women to create and study regions of male advantage in different parameter spaces. Our analysis exposes complicated temporal correlations between the QBRs and series of pre-intervention (e.g., HIV acquisition risks per act) and intervention parameters (e.g., VMB efficacy mechanisms, rates of resistance development and reversion) and indicates that different QBRs may often disagree on the gender distribution of the benefits from a VMB intervention. We also outline the strong influence of some modeling assumptions on the reported results and conclude that the assessment of VMB and other biomedical interventions must be based on more comprehensive analyses than calculations of infections prevented over a fixed period of time.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Flow diagram of a vaginal microbicide (VMB) intervention in a heterosexual population. The departure rates μ from each compartment are omitted for simplicity.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Initial dynamics (up to 1 year after the start of the intervention) of the QBR for A)–B) baseline scenarios biR, biNR, uniR, and uniNR; C) biR scenarios with different levels of pre-enrollment screening. Marked horizontal lines (y = 1) represent the level at which both genders benefit the same.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Long-term dynamics of the QBRs for A)–B) biR scenarios with R0 < 1 (αi = 0.4, αs = 0.5, βw = 0.001, βm = 0.002); C)–D) biR scenarios with R0 > 1 (αi = 0.4, αs = 0.5, βw = 0.002, βm = 0.004) and different levels of pre-enrollment screening. Marked horizontal lines (y = 1) represent the level at which both genders benefit the same.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Regions of male advantage (RMA) in the αs−αi parameter space over 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 years with respect to A) the cumulative indicator (CI) and B) the fractional indicator (FI) for biR scenarios. Dotted lines represent the boundaries of the 25-year region assuming higher HIV acquisition risk for women than for men (biRa scenarios).
Figure 5
Figure 5
Regions of male advantage (RMA) in the βw − βm parameter space over 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 years with respect to A) the cumulative indicator (CI) and B) the fractional indicator (FI) for biR scenarios (αi = αs). Dotted lines represent the boundaries of the 25 year region assuming uni-directional protection (uniR scenarios, αi = 0).
Figure 6
Figure 6
Regions of male advantage (RMA) in the αsr parameter space over 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 years for interventions with A)–B) bi-directional protection assuming equal VMB efficacy in reducing susceptibility and infectiousness (biR scenarios, αi = αs) and C)–D) uni-directional protection (uniR scenarios, αi = 0). The dotted lines represent the boundaries of the 25-year region for the scenario assuming that the acquisition risk for women is higher than for men (biRa scenarios, αi = αs).
Figure 7
Figure 7
Dynamics of A) the prevalence of drug-resistance, B) the cumulative indicator (CI), and C) the fractional indicator (FI) for biRr scenarios with different rates of resistance reversion per year and active post-enrollment screening (δ = 1). The rate of resistance development is assumed relatively high (r1 = 0.7).
Figure 8
Figure 8
Characteristics of a hypothetical VMB intervention: A) yearly number of new infections; B) population size; C) HIV-prevalence and incidence; D) QBR based on cumulative prevented infections (CI), cumulative prevented fractions (FI), reduction in HIV-prevalence (FP) and incidence (Finc).

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