International AIDS Society Conference 2013
International AIDS Society Conference
2013
WHO issues new HIV
recommendations calling for earlier
treatment
Earlier, safer and
simpler antiretroviral therapy can push the HIV epidemic
into irreversible decline
KUALA
LUMPUR, 30 June 2013 – New HIV treatment
guidelines by the World Health Organization (WHO) recommend
offering antiretroviral therapy (ART) earlier. Recent
evidence indicates that earlier ART will help people with
HIV to live longer, healthier lives, and substantially
reduce the risk of transmitting HIV to others. The move
could avert an additional 3 million deaths and prevent 3.5
million more new HIV infections between now and
2025.
The new recommendations are presented in
WHO’s Consolidated guidelines on the use of
antiretroviral drugs for treating and preventing HIV
infection, as new data reveal a total of 9.7 million
people were taking these lifesaving drugs at the end of
2012.
“These guidelines represent another leap
ahead in a trend of ever-higher goals and ever-greater
achievements,” says WHO Director-General Dr Margaret Chan.
“With nearly 10 million people now on antiretroviral
therapy, we see that such prospects – unthinkable just a
few years ago – can now fuel the momentum needed to push
the HIV epidemic into irreversible
decline.”
The new recommendations encourage all
countries to initiate treatment in adults living with HIV
when their CD4 cell count falls to 500 cells/mm³ or less
– when their immune systems are still strong. The previous
WHO recommendation, set in 2010, was to offer treatment at
350 CD4 cells/mm³ or less. Ninety per cent of all countries
have adopted the 2010 recommendation. A few, such as
Algeria, Argentina and Brazil, are already offering
treatment at 500 cells/mm3.
WHO has based its
recommendation on evidence that treating people with HIV
earlier, with safe, affordable, and easier-to-manage
medicines can both keep them healthy and lowers the amount
of virus in the blood, which reduces the risk of passing it
to someone else. If countries can integrate these changes
within their national HIV policies, and back them up with
the necessary resources, they will see significant health
benefits at the public health and individual level, the
report notes.
The new
recommendations also include providing antiretroviral
therapy - irrespective of their CD4 count - to all children
with HIV under 5 years of age, all pregnant and
breastfeeding women with HIV, and to all HIV-positive
partners where one partner in the relationship is
uninfected. The Organization continues to recommend that all
people with HIV with active tuberculosis or with hepatitis B
disease receive antiretroviral therapy.
Another new
recommendation is to offer all adults starting to take ART
the same daily single fixed-dose combination pill. This
combination is easier to take and safer than alternative
combinations previously recommended and can be used in
adults, pregnant women, adolescents and older
children.
“Advances like these allow children and
pregnant women to access treatment earlier and more safely,
and move us closer to our goal of an AIDS-free
generation,” said UNICEF Executive Director, Anthony Lake.
“Now, we must accelerate our efforts, investing in
innovations that allow us to test new born babies faster and
giving them the appropriate treatment so that they enjoy the
best possible start in life.”
The Organization is
further encouraging countries to enhance the ways they
deliver HIV services, for example by linking them more
closely with other health services, such as those for
tuberculosis, maternal and child health, sexual and
reproductive health, and treatment for drug
dependence.
“The new WHO guidelines are very
timely in view of the rapid progress we have made in
expanding programs for prevention and treatment,” says Dr
Mark Dybul, Executive Director of the Global Fund to Fight
AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. “This is an example of how
the Global Fund and the WHO work together to support
countries as we move towards removing HIV as a threat to
public health." Since its creation in 2002, the Global
Fund has supported more than 1,000 programmes in 151
countries, providing HIV treatment for 4.2 million
people.
Challenges still remain. Alongside the new
treatment guidelines, a treatment progress update by WHO,
UNAIDS, UNICEF identified areas in need of
attention.
While the number of all eligible
children on ART has increased by 10 per cent between 2011
and 2012, this is still too slow compared to the 20 per cent
increase in adults. A further complication is that many key
populations such as people who inject drugs, men who have
sex with men, transgender people and sex workers, continue
to face legal and cultural barriers that prevent them
getting treatment that otherwise would be more easily
available. Another factor that needs to be addressed is the
significant proportion of people who, for many reasons,
‘drop out’ of treatment.
Despite this, the
‘Global Update on HIV Treatment: Results, Impact and
Opportunities’ contains encouraging data that
reinforces the feasibility of the new WHO recommendation on
earlier ART, which would expand the global number of people
eligible for antiretroviral therapy to 26
million.
Between 2011 and 2012, the largest
acceleration ever of people enrolled on ART was achieved,
with an extra 1.6 million people benefitting from
antiretroviral therapy, increasing the total to 9.7 million
people. Furthermore, increased coverage of treatment
occurred in every region of the world, with Africa leading.
Four out of 5 people who started treatment in 2012 were
living in sub-Saharan Africa.
“Today nearly 10
million people have access to lifesaving treatment. This is
a true development triumph,” says Michel Sidibé,
Executive Director of the Joint United Nations Programme on
HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). “But we now have a new challenge -
ensuring that all 26 million people eligible for treatment
have access - not one person less. Any new HIV infection or
AIDS-related death due to lack of access to antiretroviral
therapy is unacceptable.”
Today’s
recommendations were released by WHO on the opening day of
the International AIDS Society 2013 conference in Kuala
Lumpur. Among those endorsing the recommendations at the
launch were representatives from countries, where such
earlier ART intervention is already national policy, along
with development agencies who are providing technical and
financial support.
The International AIDS Society
conference is held every two years and attracts leading
scientists, clinicians, public health experts and community
leaders to examine the latest developments in HIV-related
research, and to explore how scientific advances can inform
the global response to
HIV/AIDS.
ENDS