Comparative costs and potential affordability of a multifaceted intervention to improve treatment outcomes among people with HIV who inject drugs in Russia: economic evaluation of the LINC‐II randomized controlled trial
Sydney Rosen, Elena Blokhina, Ve Truong, Agata Bereznicka, Natalia Gnatienko, Emily Quinn, Dmitry Lioznov, Evgeny Krupitsky, Amy Michals, Karsten Lunze, Jeffrey H. Samet

TL;DR
A new intervention for HIV-positive drug users in Russia improved treatment outcomes but increased costs, with some components potentially justifiable due to their effectiveness.
Contribution
The study evaluates the affordability of a multifaceted HIV intervention for drug users in Russia, providing cost data and outcomes from a randomized controlled trial.
Findings
The intervention increased 12-month HIV viral suppression and ART retention among participants.
The average cost per participant was higher in the intervention arm compared to the control arm.
Components like case management and earlier ART initiation contributed significantly to cost differences.
Abstract
The LINC‐II randomized controlled trial in St. Petersburg, Russia for HIV‐positive adults who inject drugs found that a multi‐component intervention including initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) during admission to an addiction hospital, strengths‐based case management and naltrexone significantly increased 12‐month HIV viral suppression and ART retention. We conducted a comparative cost analysis to determine if the 12‐month cost of the intervention is affordable within the current Russian health system. We used LINC‐II trial records and questionnaire responses to calculate the resources utilized by each participant in the study, including inpatient days, medications, laboratory tests, outpatient consultations, case manager interactions and opioid medication treatment. Quantities of resources utilized were multiplied by unit costs for each resource estimated from the service fee…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · HIV Research and Treatment
