Demographic approaches to the estimation of incidence of HIV-1 infection among adults from age-specific prevalence data in stable endemic conditions

AIDS. 1996 Dec;10(14):1689-97. doi: 10.1097/00002030-199612000-00014.

Abstract

Objective: To develop methods for estimating the incidence of HIV-1 infection among adults from age-specific prevalence data derived in stable endemic conditions.

Methods: Two methods are proposed. The first method is the Cumulative Incidence and Survival Method which treats HIV-1 prevalence at any given age as the cumulative incidence of new infections at each preceding age, adjusted for mortality. A model for age-specific incidence is fitted to the data using maximum likelihood techniques. The other method is the Constant Prevalence Method whereby the incidence of new infections within a time interval (t-r, t) is calculated as the difference, after adjusting for mortality, between observed prevalence levels at two successive age intervals, whose mean ages are r years apart. The two methods were applied to data from Kampala, Uganda.

Results: Plausible estimates of age-specific and cumulative HIV-1 incidence were obtained from each of the methods. Estimates of HIV-1 incidence are sensitive to assumptions regarding the length of the survival period after infection and the stability of the epidemic.

Conclusions: Reasonable estimates of HIV-1 incidence can be obtained from prevalence data derived in near-stable conditions. With the Constant Prevalence Method, these conditions may be relaxed if large sample sizes are available and age-reporting is good. The methods proposed could be used in the design and implementation of HIV-1 prevention trials. Cumulative incidence is a better indication of demographic impact than average age-specific incidence.

PIP: Two methods to estimate the incidence of HIV-1 infection among adults from age-specific prevalence data derived in stable endemic conditions are presented and tested on data from Kampala, Uganda. The Cumulative Incidence and Survival Method is first proposed which treats HIV-1 prevalence at any given age as the cumulative incidence of new infections at each preceding age, adjusted for mortality. A model for age-specific incidence is fitted to the data using maximum likelihood techniques. The Constant Prevalence Method is then presented in which the incidence of new infections within a given time interval is calculated as the difference, after adjusting for mortality, between observed prevalence levels at two successive age intervals, whose mean ages are a specified number of years apart. Plausible estimates of age-specific and cumulative HIV-1 incidence were obtained from each method.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Age Factors
  • HIV Infections / epidemiology*
  • HIV-1*
  • Humans
  • Incidence
  • Statistics as Topic / methods*
  • Uganda / epidemiology