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  5. When to start ART? A replication study of timing of antiretroviral thera...
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Replication papers
RP14

When to start ART? A replication study of timing of antiretroviral therapy for HIV-1-associated Tuberculosis

3ie Replication paper 14

Eric W. Djimeu

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In this paper, the research team conducted a replication study of Havlir and others’ 2011 study, “Timing of antiretroviral therapy for HIV-1 infection and tuberculosis.” The original study tackled the issue of optimal timing for ART initiation in HIV-TB co-infected patients by conducting a large multisite trial in 26 countries to determine the impact of earlier ART (within 2 weeks of the initiation of treatment for tuberculosis) on new AIDS-defining illness and death. The original authors find that earlier ART initiation reduces the rate of new AIDS-defining illness and death only for HIV positive TB patients with a CD4 count lower than 50.

In this replication study, the researcher team conducted a pure replication and measurement and estimation analyses. In general, the pure replication confirmed the main findings of the original paper. In addition, the research team found that earlier ART initiation is associated with a sharp increase in the incidence of TB-associated immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS). Furthermore, using mainly econometric approaches to increase the statistical power of the study and to estimate the treatment effect on patients who actually received earlier ART. The research team find that earlier ART initiation do not reduce the rate of new AIDS-defining illness and death even for HIV-positive TB patients with CD4 counts lower than 50.

Overall, the results of this replication do not provide strong support that earlier ART initiation reduces the rate of new AIDS-defining illness and death only for HIV-positive TB patients with CD4 counts lower than 50.

Treatment as Prevention: A replication study of a universal test and treatment cluster-randomized trial in Zambia and South Africa

Treatment as Prevention: A replication study of a universal test and treatment cluster-randomized trial in Zambia and South Africa

Replication paper 3ie 2022  
The authors of this paper replicated a landmark study by Hayes and colleagues (2019) on the HPTN 071 (PoPART) trial, which examined if a universal test and treatment program, along with a combination prevention intervention, could reduce HIV incidence in Zambia and South Africa. 

Treatment as prevention: A replication study on a universal test and treat cluster-randomized trial in South Africa from 2012–2016

Treatment as prevention: A replication study on a universal test and treat cluster-randomized trial in South Africa from 2012–2016

Replication paper 3ie 2022  

Authors of this paper replicated a landmark study by Iwuji and colleagues (2018) who examined the use of treatment as prevention (TaSP) trials for HIV-positive individuals in rural South Africa.

Treatment as prevention: a replication study on early antiretroviral therapy initiation and HIV-1 transmission

Treatment as prevention: a replication study on early antiretroviral therapy initiation and HIV-1 transmission

Replication paper 3ie 2020  
Eric Djimeu and Eleanor G Dickens conduct a replication of the HPTN 052 study by Cohen and colleagues that evaluates the impact of early initiation of antiretroviral therapy on rates of sexual transmission of HIV-1.

Biometric Smartcards and payment disbursement: a replication study of a state capacity-building experiment in India

Biometric Smartcards and payment disbursement: a replication study of a state capacity-building experiment in India

Replication paper 3ie 2019  
The National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme and Social Security Pension are two of the largest employment programmes in Andhra Pradesh. Muralidharan and colleagues (2016) investigated the impacts of biometrically-authenticated payment infrastructure (Smartcards) on beneficiaries of the two employment programmes.

RPS22

Risk sharing and transaction costs: a replication study of evidence from Kenya’s mobile money revolution

Replication paper 3ie 2019  
This replication study starts with the twin strategies of push-button and pure replications of the original study. It then followed this up with various consistency and robustness checks, such as propensity score matching and the Tobit model specification.

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  • DOI : 10.23846/RPS0014

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