Evaluating the biomedical and behavioral drivers of HIV-1 incidence decline in adolescent girls and young women in Uganda

January 12, 2025 by
Evaluating the biomedical and behavioral drivers of HIV-1 incidence decline in adolescent girls and young women in Uganda
Aber Maurine
Adam Akullian1, Victor Ssempijja2, Daniel Breidenbecker1, Fred Nalugoda3, Gertrude Nakigozi3, John Santelli4, Philip Kreniske5, Larry W. Chang6, Steven J. Reynolds7, Robert Ssekubugu3, Ronald H. Gray8, Maria J. Wawer6, Thomas C. Quinn9, Ronald M. Galiwango3, William J. M. Probert10, Jeffrey W. Imai-Eaton11, Oliver Ratmann12, Christophe Fraser13, Joseph Kagaayi3, Godfrey Kigozi3, M. Kate Grabowski14*, David Serwadda3*

Affiliations:

1Institute for Disease Modeling, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
2Clinical Monitoring Research Program Directorate, Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research
3Rakai Health Sciences Program, Kalisizo, Uganda
4Population and Family Health and Pediatrics, Columbia University
5Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, City University of New York
6Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and School of Medicine
7Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health
8Johns Hopkins University
9Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
10University of Oxford
11Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics, Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis, Imperial College London
12Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London
13Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Information and Discovery, University of Oxford
14Departments of Pathology and Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins University

*Corresponding authors: mkgrabowski@jh.edu; dserwadda@musph.ac.ug


ABSTRACT

Background: 

Recent declines in HIV incidence among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in Africa are often attributed to the expansion of biomedical interventions such as antiretroviral therapy and voluntary medical male circumcision. However, changes in sexual behavior may also play a critical role. Understanding the relative contributions of these factors is essential for developing strategies to sustain and further reduce HIV transmission.


Methods: 

We conducted a mathematical modelling study of data from the Rakai Community Cohort Study (RCCS), an open, population-based cohort of 15- to 49-year-olds in 30 communities in Rakai, Uganda, to investigate the biomedical and behavioral drivers of HIV incidence decline in AGYW (15-24 years of age). We estimated changes in the HIV incidence rate between 2000-2019 using retrospective cohort data to validate our modelled incidence estimates. We ran modelled counterfactual scenarios to quantify the independent and combined effects (cumulative infections averted and difference in incidence rates) of antiretroviral therapy (ART), voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC), and delays in age of first sex (AFS) over historical (between 2000-2020) and projected (between 2000-2050) time horizons.


Findings: 

Incidence in women 15-24 years of age declined by 83% between 2000-2019 (from 1.72 per 100 person-years in 2000 to 0.30 per 100 person-years in 2019), the largest reduction in incidence of all age groups of women. Increasing AFS over the last two decades (by 3 years in women and 2 years in men) was the largest contributor to incidence decline in women 15-19 years of age, averting 17% of cumulative infections between 2000-2020 and 37% between 2000-2050. Incidence in 15-19-year-old women was 69% lower in 2020 and 75% lower in 2050 compared to counterfactual scenarios without changes in AFS. ART scale-up contributed the most to incidence declines among women 20-24 years of age, averting 13% of infections between 2000-2020 and 43% of infections between 2000-2050. VMMC averted < 5% of infections in 15-24-year-olds to-date, with larger reductions in incidence between 2000 2050 in both 15–19-year-olds (13% reduction in cumulative infections) and 20–24-year-olds (22% of cumulative infections). ART, VMMC, and increasing AFS acted additively to reduce HIV incidence in AGYW, with little redundancy when combined.  


Interpretation: 

Our results provide strong support for maintaining both the protective changes in sexual behaviors and effective biomedical interventions to sustain continued reductions in HIV incidence among AGYW.


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