Identifying priority populations for HIV interventions using acquisition and transmission indicators: a combined analysis of 15 mathematical models from 10 African countries

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Abstract

Background

Characterising disparities in HIV infection across populations by gender, age, and HIV risk is key information to guide intervention priorities. We compared 9 models representing 15 different settings across Africa to assess how indicators measuring HIV acquisitions, transmissions, or potential long-term infections influence estimates of the contribution of different populations to new infections, including key populations (KPs, including female sex workers (FSW), their clients, men who have sex with men).

Methods

We evaluated four indicators: I 1 ) acquisition indicator measuring the annual fraction of all new infections acquired by a specific population, I 2 ) direct transmission indicator measuring the annual fraction of all new infections directly transmitted by a specific population, I 3 ) 1-year and I 4 ) 10-year transmission population-attributable fractions ( tPAFs ). tPAFs measure the fraction of new infections averted if transmission involving a specific population was blocked over a specific time period. We compared estimates of the four indicators across 7 populations and 15 settings and assessed if the contribution of specific populations is ranked differently across indicators for 10 settings.

Findings

Indicators identified distinct priority populations as the largest contributors: The acquisition indicator (I 1 ) identified women aged 25+ years outside KPs as contributing the most to acquired infections in 8/10 settings in 2020, but to direct transmissions (I 2 ) in only two settings. In 6/10 settings, the 10-year tPAFs (I 4 ) identified non-KP men aged 25+ years and clients of FSW as the largest contributors to HIV transmission. Notably, non-KP women aged 15-24 years acquired (I 1 ) more infections in 2020 (median of 1·7-fold across models) than they directly transmitted (I 2 ), while non-KP men aged 25+ years and clients of FSWs transmitted more infections than they acquired in all but one model (median: 1·4 and 1·6-fold, respectively). Estimates of the 10-year tPAFs accounting for transmission in the long-term were substantially larger than the direct transmission indicator for all populations, especially for FSW (median: 2·0-fold).

Interpretation

Indicators that reflect HIV acquisitions and transmissions over the short and long term can be utilised to capture the complexity of HIV epidemics across different populations and timeframes. The added nuance would improve the effectiveness of the HIV prevention response across all populations at risk.

Funding

NIH, MRC.

Research in context

Evidence before this study

Measures of the distribution of HIV acquisition across population groups are commonly used for assessing the contribution of populations to new HIV infections and prevention priorities. However, alternative indicators documented in the literature reflect transmissions or potential long-term effects. It is unclear how the choice of indicator affects the identification of populations that require additional prevention and treatment efforts to accelerate progress towards ending AIDS. We searched PubMed on March 08, 2025, with the terms (HIV) AND (Africa*) AND (acqui*) AND (transm*) AND (model*), with no language or publication date restriction, and identified no meta-assessment or mathematical model comparison studying differences in estimates of the fraction of all infections acquired and transmitted by a population when using different epidemiological indicators.

Added value of this study

Using estimates from 9 models representing 15 different epidemic settings across Africa, we studied indicators of HIV epidemic contribution for 7 populations, including female sex workers, their clients, men who have sex with men, and non-key populations stratified by gender and age. We measured four commonly reported indicators of HIV contribution. One focused on acquired infections and the other three focused on transmissions. We found that estimates from these different indicators can differ greatly for the same model and population, to the extent that they identify different populations for prioritising interventions to accelerate HIV incidence declines. The acquisition-focused indicator (i.e. fraction of all infections acquired by a given population), the most used and communicated by UNAIDS, substantially underestimates the large contribution of men, and particularly male clients of female sex workers, to ongoing HIV transmission.

Implications of all the available evidence

The choice of indicators measuring a population’s contribution to the HIV epidemic should be carefully considered and precisely defined. Modelling teams working in partnership with government, implementers, funders, and community members should systematically report both acquisition- and (long-term) transmission-focused indicators, instead of only measuring acquisitions in the short term as currently done. Multiple indicators will more comprehensively capture the potential impact of prevention efforts addressing acquisition and transmission risks of different vulnerable populations.

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