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Best Practices and Key Issues Related to Measurement Approaches for Characterizing MARPS Epidemics and Populations Overview. Willi McFarland, MD, PhD, MPH&TM Director of HIV Surveillance, San Francisco Department of Public Health
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Best Practices and Key Issues Related to Measurement Approaches for Characterizing MARPS Epidemics and Populations Overview Willi McFarland, MD, PhD, MPH&TM Director of HIV Surveillance, San Francisco Department of Public Health Associate Professor, Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco Interventions with Most-at-Risk Populations in PEPFAR Countries: Lessons Learned and Challenges Ahead, Chenai, India, February 18-20, 2009
MARPs Measurement Issues Sampling Population size estimation Key measures in tracking the HIV epidemic and our response
Sampling MARPS • Gold standard: Probability-based sampling • Representative • Accurate • Reproducible • Approximations of probability sampling (RDS, TLS, TS) • The best of both worlds? • Or, Purgatory? • Down to earth: Convenience and snowball sampling • Inclusive • Consistent • Standardized
I RDS
Equilibrium for sex with foreigners in RDS study of MSM, Uganda No foreign sex partner Had any foreign sex partner
China Ukraine ? Vietnam USA Honduras Brazil Croatia Nepal Uganda Paraguay Bangladesh Kenya Thailand South Africa Zanzibar Indonesia MSM: RDS Successes from Malekinejad et al., 2008
Ukraine UK Mexico Vietnam San Francisco Estonia Nepal India Russia Iran Thailand Albania Tanzania Serbia Bosnia Montenegro Indonesia IDU: RDS Successes
San Francisco Tanzania Vietnam Honduras India Papua New Guinea Female sex workers: RDS Successes
Keeping ahead of the curve: HIV prevalence MSM in Beijing, by RDS RDS successfully tracked the transition from low level to concentrated HIV epidemic % infected 2004 2005 2006 Courtesy of Xiaoyan Ma (China CDC Beijing) and colleagues
Chicago Coupon economy Russia Iran Kosovo India IDU: RDS Failures
China Brazil Caribbean India Paraguay High stigma Low trust Low incentive Not networked Low trust Serbia Too trafficked Female sex workers: RDS Failures
Beijing Repro-ducibility Jinan Estonia Low incentive Anhui Low incentive Caribbean Low incentive Low trust High stigma Albania? Papua New Guinea? Kosovo Fake MSM? Low incentive penile swab Cambodia Coupon economy Guangzhou Bangladesh? Fake MSM? Ninxia MSM: RDS Failures Bad reputation
Equilibrium levels in 3 RDS surveys, MSM, Beijing RDS was not as reproducible as expected
I RDS
I TLS
Targeted Sampling and TLS Locations of IDU activity in San Francisco Physical and ethnographic mapping Targeted sampling - recruit purposely to reflect ethnography Time-location sampling (TLS) – randomize venues, days, and times to recruit
San Francisco MSM Bangkok MSM Harare Alcohol users Salgueiro Mobile truck drivers Shenzhen MSM Forteleza Upper SES MSM TLS successes and lessons learned
HIV prevalence among MSM in Bangkok by TLS TLS studies sounded an alarm for MSM across Asia % infected 2007 2005 2001 2003 Courtesy of Frits van Griensven (US CDC Thailand) and colleagues
Many TLS Issues Dependent upon formative research Uncertain probabilities of inclusion Logistics, safety, time-consuming Ethical, exposure of safe venues
Sampling Best Practices: TLS or RDS? TLS “What you see is what you get” RDS “Faith-based” Both require good formative research
MARP Population Size Estimation No Census, no gold standard Definitions vary Methods vary
Population Size Estimation Methods Census method Population-based surveys Components Compartmental Truncated Poisson Nomination Network scale up Capture-recapture Multiplier method • Delphi • Consensus • Conventional wisdom • Borrow from neighbor • Adjust from a neighbor
MARP Measures Issues Post ART scale-up world Increasing demand for data New biological measures New behavioral measures
Biological Measures HIV and STI prevalence HIV incidence (e.g., BED) Post ART scale-up era: Previously unknown infection CD4, unmet need for ART ARV resistance
Behavioral Measures • Core, consistent indicators • Basic transmission-related behaviors • Knowledge, attitudes, beliefs • Post ART scale-up era • Behavior affected by knowledge of serostatus, partners’ serostatus, and ART use • New hypotheses • Sexual networks rather than individual level behavior
Seroadaptation among known HIV-positive MSM, San Francisco, 2008 Any unprotected sex: 70% High HIV transmission risk: 19%
Concurrent When there are 2+ partners, African American MSM are 3 x more likely to have concurrent partnerships than other MSM W Serial African American MSM Other MSM
Conclusions: best practices (or Purgatory?) Methods: Appropriate to the target population, resources Triangulation: Use multiple methods, measures, sources, and types of data Measures: Keep ahead of the curve