The Malta Business Weekly

Seeking optimal HIV treatment: building on 30 years of innovation

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It has been thirty years since the discovery of Human Immunodefi­ciency Virus, the underlying cause of acquired immunodefi­ciency syndrome. This discovery led to the developmen­t of antiretrov­iral therapies that have substantia­lly improved both the quality and length of life of affected individual­s. When one looks at the wide range of effective treatment options for HIV available today, the world seems a vastly different place from 30 years ago.

Dr Marty St. Clair is one of the researcher­s who has been directly involved in GSK’s ongoing commitment to improving the health and lives of those with HIV. In the early 1980s, she was part of the team who discovered and helped develop the very first HIV drug – azidothymi­dine (AZT, also known as zidovudine).

The developmen­t of AZT occurred in a relatively short time span. Within a year of the first reports of virus isolation, scientists at Burroughs Wellcome (later GSK) were screening compounds for anti-HIV activity. In just under three years from the first screening activities, AZT was approved by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion on March 19, 1987.

This amazingly short timeline is testament not only to the hard work, collaborat­ion and diligence of the scientists involved, but to the seriousnes­s of the situation. Faced with this challenge, scientists from all over the world worked together to achieve a common goal, and, given the complexiti­es involved, this was considered a major achievemen­t. Today, Dr St. Clair continues to be directly involved in HIV drug discovery and developmen­t.

Thirty years on from developmen­t of the first antiretrov­iral, there remain a number of significan­t challenges: people living with HIV still face stigma and discrimina­tion, are reluctant to get tested, disclose their HIV status or take antiretrov­iral therapy. Recent ECDC research has revealed that nearly half of all HIV cases are diagnosed late.

A sharp and steady increase in the number of reported HIV infections has been noted in Malta over the last five years, with 61 new cases of HIV reported in 2015 compared to 17 new cases reported in 2010 (Times of Malta, December 1, 2015. This requires an urgent call for action to increase awareness of HIV infection and ensure that people at most risk of contractin­g the disease are tested and if required, receive optimal treatment early on in the disease.

Since the developmen­t of AZT just over 30 years ago, more efficaciou­s and tolerable treatments have been developed. Optimal HIV treatment leads to sustained viral suppressio­n which is key to achieving the ambitious United Nations treatment goals that aim to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030. The question in Malta remains: are HIV patients getting the best and the latest anti retroviral therapy? GSK – one of the world’s leading research-based pharmaceut­ical and healthcare companies – is committed to improving the quality of human life by enabling people to do more, feel better and live longer. For further informatio­n please visit www.gsk.com

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