Treatment as prevention: policy and programmatic considerations

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Scaling up HIV services for women and children achievements and challenges e-lluminate session e-lluminate session Yves Souteyrand 2 March 2010.
Advertisements

EMTCT Tanzania Experience 6 th Joint Biennial HIV & AIDS Sector Review Dr MD Kajoka PMTCT Coordinator.
Global Plan towards the elimination of new HIV infections among children by 2015 and keeping their mothers alive DR. Nicholas Muraguri OGW, MD,MPH, MBA,
HIV in the United Kingdom: 2013 HIV and AIDS Reporting Section Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance and Control (CIDSC) Public Health England London,
Scaling up Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT): What Will it Take to Eliminate MTCT? Jessica Rodrigues Presentation for UNICEF Written.
Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV in Ghana
Know Your epidemic: The value of population-based household surveys Eva Kiwango Senior Strategic Information Advisor United Nations Joint Programme on.
The Implementation of the WHO Asia Pacific Treatment Metrics Dr. YU, Dongbao WHO Regional Office for the Western Pacific 20 July, 2014 Antiretroviral Treatment.
“Getting to Zero: Thailand’s Experience with E-MTCT” Petchsri Sirinirund Advisor on HIV/AIDS Policy and Programme Department of Disease Control, Thailand.
Are people living with HIV less likely to pass HIV to others if they are on treatment? Exploring the use of treatment as prevention James Wilton Project.
Dr. Yogan Pillay Deputy Director General National Department of Health, South Africa Monday 1 July 2013 OPERATIONAL AND PROGRAMMATIC CONSIDERATIONS IN.
Kevin Fenton, MD, PhD, FFPH Director, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Preliminary findings of a routine PMTCT Option B+ programme in a rural district in Malawi Rebecca M. Coulborn 1, Laura Triviño Duran 1, Carol Metcalf 2,
Creating an AIDS-Free Generation The beginning of the end of AIDS Center for Strategic & International Studies Washington, DC March 22, 2012 Thomas R.
ART Regimen Selection and Treatment Initiation for PMTCT Programs Lara Stabinski, MD, MPH Medical Officer Clinical Services S/GAC June 18, 2012.
The Rationale for Option B+ in Malawi
ANC-HIV INTEGRATION Countdown to zero; is it time for a gear shift? Dr Elizabeth Anne Bukusi, MBChB, M.Med (ObGyn), MPH, PhD PGD (Research Ethics) Deputy.
John M Blandford, PhD Chief – Health Economics, Systems and Integration Branch Division of Global HIV/AIDS U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Introduction of The Strategic Use of ARVs For Treatment & Prevention in Indonesia: From Policy Development to Implementation Dr. Siti Nadia Tarmizi M Epid.
The Strategic Use of ARVs | IAC Satellite, July 22, |1 | Strategic Use of Antiretroviral Drugs WHO Perspective for Future Guidelines Chair of WHO.
Integrated Health Programs for Women and Children: Lessons from the Field Dr. Ambrose Misore Project Director, APHIA II Western, PATH’s Kenya Country Program.
1 HIV/AIDS Related Research Agenda Workshop Phnom Penh, Sunway Hotel March 28-29, 2007.
Models of Care for Paediatric HIV Miriam Chipimo MD MPH Reproductive Health & HIV&AIDS Manager, UNICEF, Malawi.
2009 Recommendations for Antiretroviral Therapy in Adults and Adolescents Summary of WHO Rapid Advice December 2009 Source: WHO HIV/AIDS Department.
2013 WHO Consolidated ARV Guidelines Summary of Major Recommendations and Estimated Impact GSG Briefing July 19, 2013 Gottfried Hirnschall, Director HIV.
6 th Biannual Joint HIV Sector Review Meeting Nov 11-13,2014 Ministry of Health and Social Welfare Mwanaisha Nyamkara, NTLP Werner Maokola, NACP Nov 11,
Office of Overseas Programming & Training Support (OPATS) Treatment Adherence HIV Care, Support, and Treatment.
The Rising Prevalence of NCDs: Implications for Health Financing and Policy Charles Holmes, MD, MPH Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator Department.
Implementation of HIV Treatment as Prevention in China Yan Zhao MD National Center for AIDS/STD Control & Prevention Chinese Center for Disease Control.
HIV-infected subjects with CD4 350 to 550 cells/mm serodiscordant couples HPTN 052 Study Design Immediate ART CD Delayed ART CD4
Exploring the potential impact of ART in reducing HIV transmission. Geoff Garnett, Jeff Eaton, Tim Hallett & Ide Cremin Imperial College London.
Integrating ART/PMTCT services into MNCH services to enhance test & treat strategy for HIV infected pregnant and lactating women (Option B+) WHO Satellite.
WHO PMTCT ARV Guidelines 2012 Programmatic Update EFV During Pregnancy Nathan Shaffer PMTCT Technical Lead, WHO IATT Webinar 11 July, 2012.
Understanding temporal trends in HIV prevalence, incidence and ARV Dr Valerie Delpech Head of HIV surveillance Public Health England.
HIV and STI Department, Health Protection Agency - Colindale HIV and AIDS Reporting System The threshold for an ART secondary prevention effect on HIV.
ARV-Based Prevention: Perspective from Epidemiology & Modelling Tim Hallett Imperial College London.
PRECONCEPTION COUNSELING AND CARE FOR HIV-INFECTED WOMEN OF CHILDBEARING AGE.
HIV TESTING AND EXPANSION OF ART FOR TB PATIENTS, BOTTLE NECKS CHALLENGES AND ENABLERS FOR SCALE UP IN KENYA DR. JOSEPH SITIENEI, OGW NTP MANAGER - KENYA.
Fast-Tracking Treatment to End AIDS ICASA Ambassador Deborah Birx, MD U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator November 30, 2015.
MATERNAL ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY AND INFANT OUTCOMES THROUGHOUT THE FIRST YEAR OF LIFE: results from the DREAM study in Dschang, Cameroon Taafo F, Doro.
TB AND HIV: “THE STRATEGIC VISION FOR THE COUNTRY” Dr Lindiwe Mvusi 18 May 2012 MMPA Congress 2012.
Moving from a commodity approach: “Fund some of everything” or “Fund what is comfortable” to An Investment approach: “Fund evidenced-based activities.
Boston University Slideshow Title Goes Here District Prevalence of Unsuppressed HIV in South African Women: Monitoring Programme Performance and Progress.
WHO Global Health Sector Strategies HIV; Viral Hepatitis; Sexually Transmitted Infections Common structure Universal Health Coverage SDGs Cascade.
DR. THOMAS OGARO, MBCHB, MPH, PhD
New WHO Guidelines on Person centred monitoring
Contents Global impact 2.Service cascade 3. Policies and WHO support.
Acceptability of early HIV treatment among South Africa women N Garrett, E Norman, V Asari, N Naicker, N Majola, K Leask, Q Abdool Karim and SS Abdool.
Zimbabwe’s shift towards treat all: national country context
PMTCT Prongs 1 & 2 and the repositioning of Family Planning ICASA 2011
Closing the Treatment Gap of Children Living with HIV
WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, UNESCO & GNP+
The Last Mile to EMTCT: Are we there yet?
Dr. Kathure, Weyenga and Langat
Global updates on elimination and the concept of pre-elimination Shaffiq Essajee WHO HIV Department IATT Webinar: March 17th 2016.
Monitoring the implementation of the TB Action Plan for the WHO European Region, 2016–2020 EU/EEA situation in 2016 ECDC Tuberculosis Programme European.
What Will It Take To End Pediatric AIDS
Parastu Kasaie Johns Hopkins University
Patrick Brenny, UNAIDS RST-WCA
From toward HIV Elimination with Boosted-Integrated Active HIV Case Management (B-IACM) in Cambodia Dr. Penh Sun LY, Director, NCHADS Presented.
ANTIRETROVIRAL TREATMENT IN RESOURCE-LIMITED SETTINGS: PROGRESS & CHALLENGES IN SOUTH AFRICA YOGAN PILLAY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, SOUTH AFRICA IAS, 2014.
monitoring & evaluation THD Unit, Stop TB department WHO Geneva
Contents Global impact 2.Service cascade 3. Policies and WHO support.
HIV.
Multi-disease diagnostic integration
Illustrative Cluster Detection and Response Strategy
Target-Setting, Impact and Resource Needs
Update on global progress in ART
Why Quality Matters in ART Programs
HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS (HIV) PREVENTION & CARE
Presentation transcript:

Treatment as prevention: policy and programmatic considerations Dr Peter Cherutich, MD, MPH Head, HIV Prevention, Kenya Ministry of Public Health

But then why policy makers are cautious Outline Why the excitement? But then why policy makers are cautious Who will pay? How sustainable is it What implementation considerations Prioritization Adherence Drug resistance Measuring Impact Accelerate access to viral load

Why are we excited? Elimination of vertical transmission And potential for elimination of sexual transmission Balance between public health and human rights Demonstrated scale up

Significant contribution of early treatment

Accelerated Scale-Up Results in Annual Decline in New HIV Infections Under the base-case scenario, incident HIV infections remain relatively constant at or above 120,000 new cases per year. With accelerated treatment scale-up, incident HIV infections could be driven down to ~86,500 by 2015.

But there is caution…..?cost? sustainability Millions Estimated costs to maintain current coverage levels in the Base Case and Accelerated Scale-Up Scenario. Flattened treatment costs in the accelerated scale-up scenario reflect effects of declining HIV incidence and additional implementation efficiency.

Prioritization....the ethical dilemna To triage or not to triage Risk-based? Co-morbidities? CD4 count? Pregnant women Triple Benefits of Option B Plus Transmission benefits to baby <5% transmission in breastfeeding populations Transmission benefits to the sexual partners-linked or otherwise Health/fertility benefits to mother Preserves fertility Would be eligible for HAART

CD4 threshold for maternal ART Risk of transmission related to maternal CD4 Many women with CD4 350-500 will go below 350 by the time they would wean their infant (47% of women receiving short-course ARVs with baseline 400-500 had CD4 < 350 by 24 months (Ekouevi K, CROI 2011) Data support ART for prevention of sexual transmission or disease progression if CD4 < 500

Prioritization...contd Sero-discordant couples Dynamics of sexual partnerships 89% protective effect combined Sex workers (including MSM) High rates of partnerships/high HIV prevalence Patients with TB Reduction of TB mortality- ?a competing public health imperative

To PreP or to Treat...thats the question! PrEP until ART at 350 favoured Partners in Prevention Couples (2/100pyar) “Alive and HIV Free at 50” More Typical Couples (~9/100pyar) Modelling prevention cost effectiveness of PrEP versus ART in serodiscordant couples by CD4 count at ART initiation: Result depends on: Relative costs, PrEP effectiveness, and couple sexual behaviour Use of PrEP can be more cost-effective that earlier initiation of ART at 350 cell/µL, if: Cost<40% that of ART & Effectiveness>60% Cost-effectiveness strongly influenced by couples behaviour: PrEP most likely to be cost-effective if used in couples that remain at high risk. Broad range of PrEP characteristics coul make PrEP preferable to initiating treatment at CD4<500 cells/µL instead of <350 cells/µL. ART at 500 favoured Tim Hallett; UNAIDS/WHO PrEP modelling meeting March 2011 10

Implementation Considerations Build on the current treatment programmes Targets, pilot programmes Optimize treatment options/outcomes for the current patients E.g Those with lower cut-offs<250 HIV Testing will be critical-routine, regular New technologies, task-shifting Health system strengthening Chronic disease model-cf diabetes, hypertension Risk compensation-appropriate communication

The Treatment Cascade Decrease in HIV Transmission Wafaa El-Sadr Test HIV Positive Adopt safer behaviors Enroll in Care Treat Maintain viral suppression Initiation of ART Testing Adherence to ART Positive Prevention Linkage to care Decrease in HIV Transmission Wafaa El-Sadr 12 12

Adherence: Requires Innovation Robust retention strategies Regular adherence assessment and counselling Accelerate Fixed Dose Combinations Review current adherence theoretical models A significant proportion of healthy ‘patients’ Technology Phone based applications This requires funding!

Drug resistance..is inevitable! HIV Drug Resistance, a matter of Time However, HIV drug resistance can be exacerbated by: Patient Poor treatment adherence Drug Poor absorption Varying pharmacokinetics Sub-optimal dosing Supply chain Irregular ARV supply Strengthen health systems Strong surveillance systems Quality assurance mechanisms Supply chain management This requires funding!

Demonstrating Impact: Viral Load Consider viral load Undetectable viral load as a treatment/prevention outcome PEPFAR indicators etc Global access initiatives Integrate into existing surveillance systems Fast-track the point of care VL Learn from Early Infant Diagnosis Programmes Laboratory network Facilities should be supported to transport samples Quality assurance

…scaling up is possible UNAIDS, 2010

Acknowledgements John Blandford Nancy Knight Nicholas Muraguri Wafaa El-Sadr Fellow presenters