A Method to Estimate the Size and Characteristics of HIV-positive Populations Using an Individual-based Stochastic Simulation Model

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Fumiyo Nakagawa
  • Ard van Sighem
  • Rodolphe Thiebaut
  • Colette Smith
  • Oliver Ratmann
  • Valentina Cambiano
  • Jan Albert
  • Andrew Amato-Gauci
  • Daniela Bezemer
  • Colin Campbell
  • Daniel Commenges
  • Martin Donoghoe
  • Deborah Ford
  • Roger Kouyos
  • Rebecca Lodwick
  • Lundgren, Jens
  • Nikos Pantazis
  • Anastasia Pharris
  • Chantal Quinten
  • Claire Thorne
  • Giota Touloumi
  • Valerie Delpech
  • Andrew Phillips
  • SSOPHIE project working group in EuroCoord

It is important not only to collect epidemiologic data on HIV but to also fully utilize such information to understand the epidemic over time and to help inform and monitor the impact of policies and interventions. We describe and apply a novel method to estimate the size and characteristics of HIV-positive populations. The method was applied to data on men who have sex with men living in the UK and to a pseudo dataset to assess performance for different data availability. The individual-based simulation model was calibrated using an approximate Bayesian computation-based approach. In 2013, 48,310 (90% plausibility range: 39,900-45,560) men who have sex with men were estimated to be living with HIV in the UK, of whom 10,400 (6,160-17,350) were undiagnosed. There were an estimated 3,210 (1,730-5,350) infections per year on average between 2010 and 2013. Sixty-two percent of the total HIV-positive population are thought to have viral load <500 copies/ml. In the pseudo-epidemic example, HIV estimates have narrower plausibility ranges and are closer to the true number, the greater the data availability to calibrate the model. We demonstrate that our method can be applied to settings with less data, however plausibility ranges for estimates will be wider to reflect greater uncertainty of the data used to fit the model.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEpidemiology
Volume27
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)247-256
Number of pages10
ISSN1044-3983
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2016

Bibliographical note

Erratum

In the March 2016 issue of EPIDEMIOLOGY in the article by Nakagawa et al., “A Method to Estimate the Size and Characteristics of HIV-positive Populations Using an Individual-based Stochastic Simulation Model,” the Open Access footnote should have read: “This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CCBY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.”

Epidemiology. 27(3):e24, May 2016.

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