Thursday, March 20, 2025

NASTAD Releases 2025 Monitoring Project Annual Report

By: Ranier Simons, ADAP Blog Guest Contributor

The National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors (NASTAD) has released its 2025 National RWHAP Part B ADAP Monitoring Project Annual Report. This is the 28th year of the report, which documents key trends, challenges, and triumphs of state and territorial AIDS Drug Assistance Programs (ADAPs). The report is based on longitudinal data acquired through survey responses. The data covers fiscal year 2023 (FY2023) and calendar year 2023 (CY2023). Of the 58 surveyed jurisdictions that received ADAP earmark funding, 49 provided data. No fiscal or programmatic data were received from Alabama, Montana, West Virginia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or the Pacific Island Jurisdictions. Limited programmatic data were received from Alaska and South Dakota.

ADAP Clients Served and Top Ten States, CY2023
Photo Source: NASTAD

Key findings from this year’s report include:

  • Ryan White Part B program funding remained flat. Congressional appropriations for RWHAP Part B in FY2023 was $1.3 billion, with $899.7 million awarded explicitly to ADAP from HRSA. This was the same level of funding as in FY2022.
  • Pharmaceutical rebates accounted for the largest share of the overall FY2023 ADAP budget, at 50%. Federal ADAP earmark funding constituted 31%
  • The total number of clients enrolled, the number of new clients enrolled, and total number of clients served increased from FY2022. There were 4.7%, 15%, and 4% increases, respectively. 
  • Out of the top ten states with the highest number of ADAP clients served, Florida was first serving 29,883 clients, and California was second serving 28,123 clients.
  • Of all ADAP clients surveyed from responding jurisdictions during CY2023, 41% had incomes at or below 100% of the federal poverty level (FPL). The majority of ADAP clients, 66%, have incomes at or below 200% FPL.
  • In CY2022, 42%, less than half of clients served were people of color, with the majority identifying as Black/African American. In CY2023, 38% of ADAP clients served were Black/African American, compared to 46% in CY2018. Conversely, the proportion of White ADAP clients increased to 54% in CY2023 from 40% in CY2018. Hispanic/Latinx clients comprised 33% of CY2023 clients served compared to 21% in CY2018.
  • Biktarvy constituted the majority of ADAP antiretroviral drug expenditures

Total ADAP Program Expenditures, CY2023
Photo Source: NASTAD

Discussion

One of the primary goals of Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. (EHE) is viral suppression (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], 2024, Mar 20). Of the 47 jurisdictions that provided data, 85% of ADAP clients served in CY2023 reported viral suppression. Comparatively, out of 47 reporting programs in CY2014, 63% reported viral suppression, and out of 53 reporting programs in CY2018, 80% reported viral suppression. These increasing numbers are evidence that ADAP programs are effective and worthwhile public health expenditures. Moreover, CY2023 ADAP client viral suppression is vastly higher than the overall percentage of all people in the U.S. living with diagnosed HIV reporting viral suppression in 2022, which was only 65%. (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], 2024, Dec 12).

Regarding funding, some state ADAPs are concerned about the prospect of major reductions in federal funding to state Medicaid programs as part of FY2025 Congressional budget processes. This would fiscally adversely affect ADAPs since federal funding reductions would likely not be bolstered by any increased state investment into the Medicaid program. Thus, ADAPs would have to spend more to help those who may lose Medicaid coverage or be unable to transition to Medicaid if there is a loss of expansion.

Moreover, ADAPs provide full-pay medication assistance as well as ADAP-funded insurance programs for which clients' premiums, deductibles, and cost-sharing are paid. In CY2022, ADAPs provided insurance support for 128,418 clients, spending $698 million with an average cost per enrollee of $5,272; in CY2023, ADAPs spent $745 million on 101,502 clients with an average cost of $7344. Total and per-client expenditures were markedly higher in CY2023, although fewer people were served. According to the report there were also 44,033 ADAP clients served who were enrolled in Medicare (Table 18). It is possible to qualify for Medicare and ADAP with ADAP paying for patient cost-sharing of Medicare Part D prescription drugs that ADAPs cover. The changing landscape of insurance assistance proves that more funding is needed, not less.

Viral load by state
Photo Source: NASTAD

 Geographically, the annual report reveals a shift in viral suppression trends. The states with less than 80% of ADAP clients with <200 copies/ml viral loads are primarily concentrated in the Midwest (Chart 8). Seven EHE jurisdictions are in the U.S.: Cook County, Illinois; Marion County, Indiana; Wayne County, Michigan; the entire state of Missouri; and Cuyahoga, Franklin, and Hamilton Counties in Ohio (AETC. 2023). This would indicate that research needs to be done to uncover what caused the shift from the lower levels of viral suppression among ADAP clients in the South to ADAP clients in the Midwest.

The 2025 National RWHAP Part B ADAP Monitoring Project Annual Report contains a wide range of data in its pages, tables, and charts. The report is encouraging, proving that the RWHAP program effectively achieves beneficial health outcomes for the clients it serves. It is also an alert to challenges and a forecast of how ADAPs may need to adjust and innovate to survive.

[1] AIDS Education and Training Center (2023, August 4). AETCs and the Ending the HIV Epidemic Initiative. Retrieved from https://aidsetc.org/ehe

[2] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2024, March 20). Ending the HIV Epidemic in the US Goals. Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/ehe/php/about/goals.html

[3] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2024, December 12). National HIV Progress Report, 2024. Retrieved from https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/170363

[4] National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors (2025). 2025 Annual Report: National RWHAP Part B ADAP Monitoring Project annual report. Retrieved from  https://nastad.org/2024-rwhap-part-b-adap-monitoring-report

Disclaimer: Guest blogs do not necessarily reflect the views of the ADAP Advocacy Association, but rather they provide a neutral platform whereby the author serves to promote open, honest discussion about public health-related issues and updates.

No comments: