grant

Rapid Tests for Recent Infection (RTRI) for Precision Public Health in Sub-Saharan Africa: Next-Generation Strategies Amid Changing HIV Epidemiology

Organization NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINELocation NEW YORK, UNITED STATESPosted 4 Nov 2022Deadline 31 Oct 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY202615 year old15 years of age21+ years oldAIDS VirusAIDS preventionAIDS testAIDS/HIV testAccelerationAcquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome VirusAcquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome VirusAdoptedAdultAdult HumanAfrica South of the SaharaAnti-HIV PositivityAntibody AvidityAvidityBasutolandBechuanalandBig DataBig Data AnalyticsBig Data MethodsBig Data ToolsBigDataBioethicsBiomedical EthicsBloodBlood PlasmaBlood Reticuloendothelial SystemBlood SerumBotswanaBudgetsCause of DeathClientCost MeasuresCost metricsCountryDataData ElementDecision MakingDetectionDiagnosisDisease OutbreaksEpidemicEpidemiologyExposure toFingersGoalsGroups at riskGuidelinesHIVHIV AntibodiesHIV GenomeHIV InfectionsHIV PositiveHIV PositivityHIV PreventionHIV SeroconversionHIV SeropositivityHIV antibody positiveHIV disease transmissionHIV incidenceHIV individualsHIV infected individualsHIV infected personsHIV infection spreadHIV infection transmissionHIV peopleHIV positive individualsHIV positive peopleHIV spreadHIV testHIV transmissionHIV viral infectionHIV viral transmissionHIV virus infectionHIV+HIV-1 genomeHIV-1 incidenceHIV-1 infectionHIV-1 infection incidenceHIV-1 preventionHIV-1 spreadHIV-1 testHIV-1 transmissionHIV-1 virus transmissionHIV-2 testHIV-Associated AntibodiesHIV/AIDS incidenceHIV/AIDS preventionHIV/AIDS transmissionHIV1 genomeHTLV-III AntibodiesHTLV-III SeroconversionHTLV-III SeropositivityHTLV-III-LAV AntibodiesHealthHealth BenefitHealth Care CostsHealth Care FacilityHealth CostsHealth FacilitiesHomeHuman Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 transmissionHuman Immunodeficiency VirusesHuman T-Lymphotropic Virus Type III AntibodiesHuman immunodeficiency virus testIncidenceIndividualInfectionInfection by HIV-1Infection from HIV-1Infection of HIV-1Infectious Diseases / LaboratoryInfectious Diseases ResearchInternationalInterventionIntuitionInvestmentsLAV AntibodiesLAV-HTLV-IIILeadLesothoLifeLymphadenopathy-Associated AntibodiesLymphadenopathy-Associated VirusMachine LearningMapsMath ModelsMeasuresModelingMozambiqueNamibiaNetwork-basedNewly DiagnosedNorthern RhodesiaOutbreaksPLWHPWHPaperPatternPb elementPeople at riskPersonsPersons at riskPhylogenetic AnalysisPhylogeneticsPlasmaPlasma SerumPoliciesPolicy MakingPopulationPopulations at RiskPortuguese East AfricaPrevalencePrevent HIVPublic HealthRadialRadiusReaction TimeResearch ResourcesResourcesResponse RTResponse TimeReticuloendothelial System, Serum, PlasmaRoleRunningSensitivity and SpecificitySerumServicesSocial NetworkSouth AfricaSouth West AfricaSouthwest AfricaSpecificityStigmatizationSub-Saharan AfricaSubsaharan AfricaSustainable DevelopmentTestingTimeTrainingTransmissionVenousVirus-HIVWorkZambiaadulthoodage 15age 15 yearsantibody based detectionantibody detectionauthoritycare facilitiescohortcostcost effectivenesscost estimatecost estimationcost measurementdesigndesigningdetect antibodiesepidemic containmentepidemic controlepidemic mitigationepidemic responseepidemiologicepidemiologicalfifteen year oldfifteen years of agehealth economicsheavy metal Pbheavy metal leadheuristicshomeshuman immunodeficiency virus incidencehuman immunodeficiency virus infectionhuman immunodeficiency virus transmissionimprovedincremental costindividuals infected with HIVindividuals with HIVindividuals with human immunodeficiency virusinfected with HIVinfected with human immunodeficiency virusinfectious disease modelintuitivemachine based learningmachine learning based modelmachine learning modelmathematic modelmathematical modelmathematical modelingmicrocostingnetwork modelsnext generationnoveloutbreak responsepeople infected with HIVpeople infected with human immunodeficiency viruspeople living with HIVpeople with HIVpeople with human immunodeficiency viruspoint of carepoint of care testingprevent AIDSprevent human immunodeficiency virusprevention serviceprogramspsychomotor reaction timerapid assayrapid testrapid testsresponsesocial rolespread of human immunodeficiency virusstandard of caretest striptesting servicestooltransmission process
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Full Description

ABSTRACT/SUMMARY
HIV is a leading cause of death in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), but rates of new infections in declining. As a result,

some HIV services are becoming less efficient: HIV prevention is averting fewer infections per client served, and

HIV testing yield (i.e., the fraction of tests leading to new diagnoses) is declining. Given resource constraints,

HIV prevention and testing programs will need to increase efficiency in order to maintain momentum toward

epidemic control. Specifically, a precision public health approach could be used to focus services where their

health benefits would be greatest. Precision public health has been challenging to implement in SSA’s

generalized HIV epidemics because most transmission is not confined to identifiable key populations, eluding

precise responses. Until recently, the only tool for describing HIV transmission has been phylogenetic analysis

of HIV genome sequences, which is too slow and costly for real-time response at scale. Rapid tests for recent

HIV infection (RTRI) recently became available in SSA, offering a novel opportunity to identify active transmission

clusters and respond with precision. RTRI detects high-avidity antibodies that appear approximately one year

after HIV infection. If only low-avidity antibodies are detected, this infection likely occurred in the past year.

Zambia is an early adopter of RTRI and followed-up two-thirds of positive HIV tests with RTRI in 2021. Despite

the large scale of Zambia’s RTRI program, it has not been evaluated in terms of impact or cost-effectiveness,

and outbreak response thresholds have not been optimized. However, the wealth of data now collected by the

RTRI program could guide higher-performing, next-generation outbreak response strategies. Our team has

expertise in Zambian HIV policy, program implementation, health economics, bioethics, geospatial analysis,

machine learning, and infectious disease modeling. We helped to develop the only HIV social network model

rigorously validated to predict HIV incidence, prevalence, and transmission patterns in SSA, which has been

used for international and country-level HIV policy decision-making for over a decade. We propose to partner

with the Center for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia (CIDRZ), a Zambian-run NGO that has been

supporting MoH for over a decade in HIV policy-making and implementation (including RTRI), to (Aim 1)

determine whether the RTRI program can help Zambia achieve its epidemic control goals, (Aim 2) measure the

cost and estimate the cost-effectiveness of the RTRI program, and (Aim 3) use “big data” methods to design

next-generation outbreak responses, taking into account trade-offs of sensitivity vs. specificity, precision vs.

ease-of-use, and precision vs. avoidance of collecting potentially stigmatizing data elements. While pursuing

scientific Aims and hypotheses aligned with the NOSI “Harnessing Big Data to Halt HIV”, we will also have direct

policy impact by providing real-time analytics, HIV outbreak mapping, and input for RTRI policy decision-making.

Grant Number: 5R01AI174932-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Anna Bershteyn

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