QALYs, Comorbidities, and Cost-effectiveness of HIV Care in the Department of Defense vs the Veterans Health Administration

Project Details

Description

QALYs, Comorbidities, and Cost-effectiveness of HIV Care in the Department of Defense vs the Veterans Health Administration I. ABSTRACT The challenges faced by people with HIV (PWH) are changing. Modern HIV treatment and care have reduced AIDS and extended lifespans. Throughout these longer lifespans, however, PWH are more likely to be diagnosed with non-AIDS comorbidities than people without HIV. The focus of HIV research and treatment must therefore shift away from AIDS and mortality towards non-AIDS comorbidities and the quality of this extended lifespan. Treatment of these non-AIDS comorbidities constitutes a substantial share of long-term HIV care cost. We will assess the cost-effectiveness of HIV care in two large single-payer systems using a novel approach focusing on the challenges of non-AIDS comorbidities and quality of life faced by PWH today. Health records for over 4,268 patients from the US Military HIV Natural History Study (NHS) and over 55,880 patients from the Veterans Aging Cohort Study (VACS) will be derived for the year range 2002-2022. Quality- adjusted life-years (QALYs) will be employed to take into account patient preferences for their current health state relative to perfect health. Health states will be identified as combinations of stages of HIV and permutations of comorbidities. The QALY for surviving an additional year in each health state will be estimated. QALYs will be estimated using traditionally employed and novel methods. As we demonstrate, our machine learning application allows us to accurately measure QALYs in the absence of quality of life questionnaire data. The time of progressing from one health state to another will be estimated. A model of HIV progression capable of determining the patient's risk of future non-AIDS comorbidities will be developed. The cost-effectiveness of modern era HIV care in the DoD vs the VA will be assessed using this new model. This work will produce several solutions for researchers, clinicians, and policymakers. The study will produce formulas enabling researchers to accurately measure QALYs in the absence of health-related quality of life data. The study will produce a new model of HIV progression enabling clinicians to predict and prevent the non-AIDS comorbidities the patient is at highest risk of developing. Employing access to Kaiser Permanente, Ryan White Care, and other data with propensity score methods will allow us to estimate custom models for those populations and generalize our findings to those populations. The study will inform DoD and VA policymakers whether it is more cost-effective to retain PWH in the DoD or transfer them to the VA. The proposal addresses the Office of AIDS Research priority area of “Addressing HIV-Associated Comorbidities, Coinfections, & Complications”, the National Institute of Aging research priority area of “Understanding the Dynamics of the Aging Process” Goal A, Goal E, and Goal F by studying comorbidity progression paths among PWH as they age, informing of future complications and possible preventive efforts, and determining cost-effective systems for the management of those comorbidities.
StatusActive
Effective start/end date1/08/2430/06/25