IAS URGES NEW FOCUS ON ART AS PREVENTION, CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE GLOBAL ACTION AND FUNDING FOR UNIVERSAL ACCESS TO HIV THERAPY
4 November 2009 (Geneva, Switzerland) - International AIDS Society today saluted the World Health Organization (WHO)
for its focus on scaling up antiretroviral therapy (ART) as prevention as well as for treatment. The WHO consultation that concluded today has reaffirmed the urgent need for universal access to ART
for the treatment of people living with HIV, emphasizing the clinical benefit of early treatment for individuals, as well as the prevention impact of increased access to ART in reducing HIV
transmission and tuberculosis (TB) incidence. The IAS's statement came at the end of a three-day consultation on ART for HIV Prevention convened by WHO.
ART significantly reduces HIV viral load, thereby reducing the risk of HIV transmission. In high-income countries, ART has virtually eliminated
transmission of HIV from mothers to their babies, and a number of studies indicate that universal provision of ART to people living with HIV would have a
major impact on reducing HIV transmission and TB incidence globally.
A recent mathematical model by Granich et al (WHO, 2009) also has proposed that universal, voluntary HIV testing on an annual basis, immediately
followed by ART for all persons who test positive, would likely result in a 95 percent reduction in annual HIV incidence globally within 10 years.
Importantly, the health benefits of universal access to ART are not limited to reducing HIV illness and transmission. Earlier initiation of
ART has also been associated with better survival, improved tolerability of therapy, and improved immune response, and has been shown to reduce the
transmission of tuberculosis among HIV-infected individuals.
"In addition to saving lives and improving individual health, HIV therapy has tremendous potential to improve health at the community level,
by reducing HIV transmission and the incidence of tuberculosis, which continues to be a major killer in low- and middle-income countries" said IAS
President Dr. Julio Montaner, Director of the BC Centre for Excellence in Vancouver, Canada. "But the promise of ART, to save lives and reduce
millions of new HIV infections, will not be fulfilled without immediate follow-through on the commitment to universal access made by the G8
nations in 2005. That commitment comes due in 2010, and we are still far from able to reach all those in need of therapy quickly and effectively."
The UN's most recent progress report on universal access indicates that less than half of all people living with HIV in the world who could
benefit clinically from ART have access. WHO treatment guidelines call for the initiation of ART at a relatively late stage of HIV disease, when an
individual's immune system has already been weakened substantially by the virus. These guidelines will change soon, and new guidance is expected
to urge earlier initiation of ART.
Noting that demand for ART access, and associated costs, will increase significantly as programmes adopt the clinically sound CD4
threshold of 350 cells/mm3 as a starting point for ART, Montaner added that "savings from reduced HIV transmission, increased wellbeing,
and decreased illnesses and hospitalizations make such a move not only feasible but also fiscally sound. Our models suggest that this can
be a highly cost-effective strategy."
The IAS specifically called for increased operations research on the preventative benefits of more widespread treatment scale up,
including continued support for the 2007 Sydney Declaration, which was adopted at the 4th IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and
Prevention. The declaration urges that 10 percent of all resources dedicated to HIV programming from granting agencies and national health
budgets be allocated for operations research to improve HIV interventions.
"At every step along the way to universal access, the scale-up of HIV treatment should be guided by operations research,"
said IAS Executive Director Robin Gorna. "Such research will ensure that the implications of more widespread HIV testing and treatment -- including
its implications for equity, human rights, morbidity and mortality, and the preventative impact of ART on HIV transmission -- are informed by evidence of
what works best."
Ends
International AIDS Society is the world's leading independent association of
HIV professionals, with 14,000 members from 190 countries working at all levels of the global response to AIDS. Our members include researchers
from all disciplines, clinicians, public health and community practitioners on the frontlines of the epidemic, as well as policy and programme
planners. The IAS is the custodian of the biennial International AIDS Conference, which will next be held in Vienna, Austria in July 2010.
For more information contact:
Regina Aragón, IAS
+39 329 445 9590
Regina.Aragon@gmail.com
Jeff DeRoche
+1 917 280 6440
jmderoche@gmail.com
Reproduced with permission - "International AIDS Society (IAS)"
International AIDS Society (IAS)
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