Frontiers in Public Health (Nov 2023)

How much does HIV self-testing cost in low and middle income countries? A systematic review of evidence from economic studies

  • Brianna Empringham,
  • Brianna Empringham,
  • Angela Karellis,
  • Abdulhameed Kashkary,
  • Abdulhameed Kashkary,
  • Olivia D’Silva,
  • Sergio Carmona,
  • Marta Fernandez Suarez,
  • Angelina Addae,
  • Nitika Pant Pai,
  • Alice Anne Zwerling

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1135425
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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ObjectivesHIV self-testing (HIVST) has been proposed as an innovative strategy to diagnose human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). While HIVST offers the potential to broaden accessibility of early HIV diagnosis and treatment initiation, this testing strategy incurs additional cost and requires confirmatory testing and treatment. We have conducted the first systematic review to summarize the current economic literature for HIVST in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).DesignA search strategy was developed including key terms for HIV, self-testing and cost-effectiveness and was conducted in Medline and Embase databases. Studies were included that reported costs per outcome and included both cost-effectiveness and cost-utility outcome measures. The search strategy identified publications up until August 15, 2023 were included. Abstract and full text screening was conducted and a standardized data abstraction form was used for included studies. Costs are reported in USD, 2020.ResultsOur search strategy identified 536 total titles from the search strategy, which were screened down to 25 relevant studies that provided both cost and outcome data on HIVST. There was significant heterogeneity in the HIVST intervention, study population, costs and outcomes reported among included studies. Cost per person tested ranged from $1.09–155. Cost per case diagnosed ranged from $20–1,277. Cost-utility estimates ranged from cost-saving to $1846 per DALY averted. Higher cost-effectiveness estimates were associated with more expensive testing algorithms with increased support for linkage to care and post-test counseling.ConclusionAll studies considered HIVST cost-effective although major drivers were identified included underlying HIV prevalence, testing cost and linkage to care. HIVST is likely to be cost-effective in a LMIC context, however policy makers should be aware of the drivers of cost-effectiveness when implementing HIVST programs as these underlying factors can impact the overall cost-effectiveness of HIVST.

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