Incremental cost of pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis service provision via an online pharmacy in Kenya

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Abstract

Background

Online pharmacy HIV pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP/PEP) provision is a novel strategy to expand HIV prevention coverage. In the ePrEP pilot study, we found online pharmacy PrEP/PEP was feasible and reached populations at HIV risk in Kenya. However, program costs data are lacking.

Methods

We conducted a costing within the ePrEP pilot study in Nairobi from 11/01/2022-12/29/2023. We obtained costs from expense reports and conducted time-and-motion observations and staff interviews. We estimated total and unit costs in the first year of implementation, cost per client and per PrEP client-month (2023 US Dollars (USD)).

Results

Overall, 229 clients initiated PrEP (507 months of PrEP coverage) and 1320 initiated PEP. Based on observed program volume, annual financial cost was $109,945 USD (PrEP: $19,456; PEP: $90,489). Cost per client was higher for PrEP than PEP ($85 vs $68.6), and cost per PrEP client-month was $38 (mean duration: 2.2 months). Main drivers of financial costs were courier-delivery of HIV testing kits and drugs (PrEP: 50.6%; PEP: 40.5%), demand generation (PrEP: 25.9%; PEP: 32.1%), and equipment, system development, and utilities (PrEP: 9.3%; PEP: 9.8%). Assuming a scaled-up client volume of 2500 (PrEP: 370; PEP: 2130) reduced per-client financial costs for PrEP ($65.5) and PEP ($56) and cost per PrEP client-month ($29.6).

Conclusions

Costs of online PrEP/PEP provision is likely higher than clinic-based PrEP. Implementing cost sharing models including charging clients for HIV testing and optimizing courier delivery routes can increase program efficiencies. Our cost estimates can inform economic evaluations of online PrEP/PEP delivery.

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