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Publication
Featured researches published by Anna Bershteyn.
The Lancet Global Health | 2014
Jeffrey W. Eaton; Nicolas A. Menzies; John Stover; Valentina Cambiano; Leonid Chindelevitch; Anne Cori; Jan A.C. Hontelez; Salal Humair; Cliff C. Kerr; Daniel J. Klein; Sharmistha Mishra; Kate M. Mitchell; Brooke E. Nichols; Peter Vickerman; Roel Bakker; Till Bärnighausen; Anna Bershteyn; David E. Bloom; Marie-Claude Boily; Stewart T. Chang; Ted Cohen; Peter J. Dodd; Christophe Fraser; Chaitra Gopalappa; Jens D. Lundgren; Natasha K. Martin; Evelinn Mikkelsen; Elisa Mountain; Quang D. Pham; Michael Pickles
BACKGROUND New WHO guidelines recommend initiation of antiretroviral therapy for HIV-positive adults with CD4 counts of 500 cells per μL or less, a higher threshold than was previously recommended. Country decision makers have to decide whether to further expand eligibility for antiretroviral therapy accordingly. We aimed to assess the potential health benefits, costs, and cost-effectiveness of various eligibility criteria for adult antiretroviral therapy and expanded treatment coverage. METHODS We used several independent mathematical models in four settings-South Africa (generalised epidemic, moderate antiretroviral therapy coverage), Zambia (generalised epidemic, high antiretroviral therapy coverage), India (concentrated epidemic, moderate antiretroviral therapy coverage), and Vietnam (concentrated epidemic, low antiretroviral therapy coverage)-to assess the potential health benefits, costs, and cost-effectiveness of various eligibility criteria for adult antiretroviral therapy under scenarios of existing and expanded treatment coverage, with results projected over 20 years. Analyses assessed the extension of eligibility to include individuals with CD4 counts of 500 cells per μL or less, or all HIV-positive adults, compared with the previous (2010) recommendation of initiation with CD4 counts of 350 cells per μL or less. We assessed costs from a health-system perspective, and calculated the incremental cost (in US
AIDS | 2014
Daniel J. Klein; Anna Bershteyn; Philip A. Eckhoff
) per disability-adjusted life-year (DALY) averted to compare competing strategies. Strategies were regarded very cost effective if the cost per DALY averted was less than the countrys 2012 per-head gross domestic product (GDP; South Africa:
Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2013
Anna Bershteyn; Daniel J. Klein; Philip A. Eckhoff
8040; Zambia:
Nature Communications | 2018
Ameya R. Kirtane; Omar Abouzid; Daniel Minahan; Taylor Bensel; Alison L. Hill; Christian Selinger; Anna Bershteyn; Morgan Craig; Shirley S. Mo; Hormoz Mazdiyasni; Cody Cleveland; Jaimie Rogner; Young-Ah Lucy Lee; Lucas Booth; Farhad Javid; Sarah J. Wu; Tyler Grant; Andrew M. Bellinger; Boris Nikolic; Alison Hayward; Lowell Wood; Philip A. Eckhoff; Martin A. Nowak; Robert Langer; Giovanni Traverso
1425; India:
AIDS | 2017
Adam Akullian; Anna Bershteyn; Daniel Klein; Alain Vandormael; Till Bärnighausen; Frank Tanser
1489; Vietnam:
International Health | 2015
Daniel J. Klein; Philip A. Eckhoff; Anna Bershteyn
1407) and cost effective if the cost per DALY averted was less than three times the per-head GDP. FINDINGS In South Africa, the cost per DALY averted of extending eligibility for antiretroviral therapy to adult patients with CD4 counts of 500 cells per μL or less ranged from
BMC Systems Biology | 2013
Anna Bershteyn; Philip A. Eckhoff
237 to
International Health | 2016
Anna Bershteyn; Daniel J. Klein; Philip A. Eckhoff
1691 per DALY averted compared with 2010 guidelines. In Zambia, expansion of eligibility to adults with a CD4 count threshold of 500 cells per μL ranged from improving health outcomes while reducing costs (ie, dominating the previous guidelines) to
AIDS | 2017
Adam Akullian; Anna Bershteyn; Britta L. Jewell; Carol S. Camlin
749 per DALY averted. In both countries results were similar for expansion of eligibility to all HIV-positive adults, and when substantially expanded treatment coverage was assumed. Expansion of treatment coverage in the general population was also cost effective. In India, the cost for extending eligibility to all HIV-positive adults ranged from
The Lancet Global Health | 2015
Anna Bershteyn; Hil M Lyons; Dhileep Sivam; Nathan P. Myhrvold
131 to