# Pharmacoeconomic perspectives on HIV: integrating data for long-term treatment and prevention

**Authors:** Mohd Mursal, Ghizal Fatima, Yulia Sh. Gushchina

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2025.1716965 · Frontiers in Medicine · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

This paper reviews how pharmacoeconomics can guide cost-effective HIV treatment and prevention strategies, especially in resource-limited settings.

## Contribution

The paper synthesizes pharmacoeconomic evidence to highlight cost-effective interventions and the importance of context-specific models for sustainable HIV control.

## Key findings

- Dolutegravir-based ART, PrEP, and VMMC are cost-effective interventions for HIV.
- Cost-effectiveness ratios for these interventions often fall within favorable thresholds.
- Real-world costs and equity must be integrated for sustainable HIV responses.

## Abstract

Sustained progress against HIV has been enabled largely by antiretroviral therapy (ART), yet gaps in prevention, treatment coverage, and financing continue to threaten long-term control of the epidemic. Pharmacoeconomics provides a crucial framework for identifying interventions that deliver the greatest health gains per dollar spent, particularly in resource-limited settings where HIV programs must balance lifelong treatment needs with expanding prevention options. Economic evaluations consistently show that high-impact interventions such as dolutegravir-based ART, targeted PrEP delivery, and voluntary medical male circumcision often fall within favorable cost-effectiveness thresholds, with typical incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) ranging from as low as US $245 per DALY averted for PrEP in serodiscordant couples to US $174–2,800 per infection averted for VMMC. This review synthesizes the pharmacoeconomic evidence across treatment and prevention, highlights the value of integrating real-world costs and equity considerations, and underscores the need for robust, context-specific economic models to support sustainable HIV responses. Achieving long-term epidemic control will depend on addressing persistent indirect costs, improving access for marginalized populations, and aligning investments with interventions that demonstrate both clinical effectiveness and compelling economic value.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** dolutegravir (PubChem CID 54726191)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infection (MESH:D007239)
- **Chemicals:** PrEP (-), dolutegravir (MESH:C562325)
- **Species:** Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (no rank) [taxon 11676]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833459/full.md

## References

101 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833459/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12833459