Black MSM experience higher HIV-1 burden than white
MSM for a complex and interdependent set of behavioral, clinical, and social
factors. This model will examine how the racial disparities in the HIV care
continuum and disparities in healthcare access will impact the outcomes of PrEP
implemented with that population. If higher PrEP coverage is seen for non-black
MSM, the resulting gap in prevention technology could compound disparities in
HIV incidence and prevalence. This model will estimate the level of PrEP
intervention targeted specifically at Black MSM would be needed to reduce or
eliminate these disparities.
This work will build on the currently available estimates of MSM population sizes in states and counties. It will result in estimates of MSM population sizes that are stratified by race and age.
For this project, we will further extend the previously
calibrated/validated simulation model of HIV among MSM in Baltimore to
incorporate explicit representation of rectal gonorrhea/chlamydia (NG/CT),
modeled as a single entity, in parallel to the existing model of HIV
transmission. NG/CT contribute to the increased risk and racial disparities in
HIV among MSM[1]. We will explicitly and separately
model transmission of NG/CT through the Baltimore MSM population, accounting
for the fact that the selected STI will co-localize with HIV and will indeed
increase the transmission risk of HIV in individuals harboring the NG/CT. We
will calibrate the model to the estimated incidence and prevalence of NG/CT in
Baltimore’s MSM population, including co-localization with HIV and the fact
that, for many individuals, HIV infection is preceded/foreshadowed by infection
with NG/CT (thereby making infection with NG/CT a potential target for PrEP
initiation). We will use the model to demonstrate how NG/CT affects the
dynamics of HIV among Baltimore’s MSM population. We will then project the
potential impact of better STI care – including offering PrEP to individuals
diagnosed with NG/CT – on HIV transmission in the city.
For this paper we have developed a new methodology for
adjusting HIV care-continuum population size and viral suppression estimates in
the CDC Medical Monitoring Project (MMP). We apply this approach to data from
the CDC HIV Outpatient Study (HOPS).
In this analysis, we will apply the methodology for
adjusting CDC Medical Monitoring Project-based HIV care continuum estimates,
developed earlier using data from the HIV Outpatient Survey, to the more robust
NA-ACCORD clinical cohort data. This manuscript will examine the 5-year period
from 2009-2014 to provide adjusted and more-representative estimate of the
national HIV care continuum and compare these results to results from HIV NHSS
laboratory surveillance.
In this paper,
we will compare the demographic makeup, risk behaviors, and clinical outcomes
of MMP participants to NA-ACCORD participants in the year 2014.
To quantify the added value of STI clinic-based
PrEP delivery, we will expand an agent-based simulation of HIV transmission
among men who have sex with men (MSM). We will simulate the impact of PrEP
delivery through STI clinics and randomly in the general population. Our
primary outcome is the five-year reduction in HIV incidence achievable under
each strategy.
The goal of this project is to estimate age-specific populations of MSM in each state and Washington, D.C. Estimates of MSM will be generated based on General Social Survey data to determine estimates of the prevalence of MSM in the past five years based on urbanicity, region, and age distribution at the country level. These estimates will then be aggregated to the state level.
The age-specific population estimates will be used to generate estimates of age-specific HIV prevalence in 2013 and HIV diagnosis rate in 2014 at the state level. Age-specific estimates of the number of MSM living with HIV in each age group in 2013 and the number of new diagnoses among MSM in 2014 in each age group. These data will be used in combination with the MSM population estimates to estimate the prevalence of HIV in 2013. By subtracting prevalent diagnoses in 2013 from the 2014 population estimates we will obtain estimates of diagnosis rate among MSM at risk in 2014.
This work will build on the currently available estimates of MSM population sizes in states and counties. It will result in estimates of MSM population sizes that are stratified by race and age.
Using our calibrated agent based
simulation model of the HIV epidemic among MSM in Baltimore City, Maryland, we
study the impact PrEP uptake on syphilis incidence over time. For this
purpose, we extend our existing simulation to incorporate explicit representation
of Syphilis infection in parallel to the existing model of HIV transmission. We
aim to evaluate changes in syphilis incidence in the short and long term under
an array of possibilities regarding Behavior change (e.g., potential increase
in risky behaviors while on PrEP), PrEP uptake (e.g., potential increase in
likelihood of PrEP uptake among those infected with Syphilis), and Syphilis
screening rates (e.g., potential increase in rates of STI testing as a
requirement for continues enrollment in PrEP). Results from the simulation will
inform syphilis control programs in Baltimore City by 1) identifying potential
interventions by characterizing and quantifying the contribution of factors
that lead to increased syphilis incidence (i.e., artifact of increased
screening among MSM enrolled in PrEP vs. population-level increases in
condomless sex); 2) informing resource allocation needed to respond to
potential increases in syphilis; and 3) identifying where and among whom
syphilis interventions should be targeted to prevent and/or control potential
syphilis epidemics in Baltimore City.
For this project, we will further extend the previously
calibrated/validated simulation model of HIV among MSM in Baltimore to
incorporate explicit representation of rectal gonorrhea/chlamydia (NG/CT),
modeled as a single entity, in parallel to the existing model of HIV
transmission. NG/CT contribute to the increased risk and racial disparities in
HIV among MSM[1]. We will explicitly and separately
model transmission of NG/CT through the Baltimore MSM population, accounting
for the fact that the selected STI will co-localize with HIV and will indeed
increase the transmission risk of HIV in individuals harboring the NG/CT. We
will calibrate the model to the estimated incidence and prevalence of NG/CT in
Baltimore’s MSM population, including co-localization with HIV and the fact
that, for many individuals, HIV infection is preceded/foreshadowed by infection
with NG/CT (thereby making infection with NG/CT a potential target for PrEP
initiation). We will use the model to demonstrate how NG/CT affects the
dynamics of HIV among Baltimore’s MSM population. We will then project the
potential impact of better STI care – including offering PrEP to individuals
diagnosed with NG/CT – on HIV transmission in the city.
To quantify the added value of STI clinic-based
PrEP delivery, we will expand an agent-based simulation of HIV transmission
among men who have sex with men (MSM). We will simulate the impact of PrEP
delivery through STI clinics and randomly in the general population. Our
primary outcome is the five-year reduction in HIV incidence achievable under
each strategy.
Four states - California, Florida, New York, and Texas - are
responsible for half of incident tuberculosis (TB) in the United States. These
states, however, differ from one another in their demographic make up (e.g.,
the size of the foreign-born and their origin) as well their recent trends of TB
dynamics (e.g., the rates of declines in the TB incidence among US- and
foreign-born in the last decade). These factors likely play important roles in
driving local TB dynamics and may result in meaningful differences in TB
dynamics in these four states. This in turn can have important implications for
state-level TB control.