Cape Times

Evidence that early treatment can prevent Aids-related events

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ART at high CD4 counts may never have experience­d any severe symptoms or illness related to HIV. We foresee that effective counsellin­g will be essential to ensuring good treatment adherence in this group of people.

We are, however, concerned that HIV counsellin­g services have not increased in line with the increasing numbers of people on ART. In some areas where we work there has in fact been a decrease in the availabili­ty of HIV counsellin­g services.

Where congestion or resource limitation­s make it impossible to offer ART to all HIV-positive people, people with CD4 counts below 350 cells/mm3 should be prioritise­d.

It is clear from the START trial that people who delay treatment are at significan­tly higher risk of serious Aidsrelate­d events such as cancer and tuberculos­is. Broadly speaking it appears that the lower your CD4 count falls, the more urgent becomes the need to start taking ART. We thus recommend that where legitimate resource constraint­s limit capacity to start people on ART, people with lower CD4 counts should be prioritise­d.

All people on ART should receive at least one viral load test per year. Viral load tests show whether the replicatio­n of HIV in the body is successful­ly being suppressed by ART – and as such it provides a good indication of when people may need to switch to an alternativ­e ART regimen. Both South African and World Health Organisati­on HIV treatment guidelines recommend at least one viral load test per year. We have, however, seen widely varying estimates of what percentage of people on ART in South Africa actually receive these tests. It is imperative that all HIV-positive people on ART should be given this test at least annually and that they should be provided with their results.

The Department of Health should regularly report retention in care, viral load coverage and viral load suppressio­n rates for all facilities in the public healthcare system.

To better understand the state of our Aids response it is important that we do not look only at the numbers of people who have started ART, but also at whether patients remain in care and healthy. Publicly reporting such figures will create greater accountabi­lity in the healthcare system and help flag underperfo­rming districts or health facilities. At the moment much of this data is not publicly available – making it harder to hold underperfo­rming health facilities and districts accountabl­e.

Retention in care, viral load coverage and viral load suppressio­n rates must be published regularly for all health facilities, all districts and all provinces.

Political obstacles to health system strengthen­ing must be addressed. The public healthcare system in South Africa is plagued by stockouts of essential medicines, staff shortages, poor infrastruc­ture and severe management short-comings. A key contributi­ng factor to this dysfunctio­n is that many people appear to be employed or appointed for political reasons, rather than for their competence or ability and commitment to effectivel­y serve the public. A lack of willingnes­s to address these political problems is underminin­g the South African public healthcare system – and by extension the country’s Aids response – and needs to be addressed.

While ambitious targets like the UNAids 90/90/90 are needed (and now supported by more robust evidence), we consider the lack of focus given to the dysfunctio­n in the healthcare systems that are supposed to deliver these targets to be a serious oversight. We call on all activists, health agencies and policymake­rs not to ignore our warnings of health system dysfunctio­n and to work with us in fighting this dysfunctio­n. The way forward: The combined results of the START and TEMPRANO trials present a significan­t turning point in our struggle against HIV. The new evidence unequivoca­lly clarifies what needs to be done. It will, however, require extraordin­ary political will to scale up the provision of quality HIV testing, prevention, treatment and support services in the way that we now know we must.

We thus call for an urgent meeting of the South African National Aids Council (Sanac) to consider the implicatio­ns of the new evidence and how to ensure that access to ART and related support services are scaled up efficientl­y.

We call for an urgent meeting and ongoing interactio­n between Sanac, the Department of Health and Treasury to cost the scale-up of ART and accompanyi­ng support services like counsellin­g. They must also model the cost-effectiven­ess and potential savings of recommendi­ng ART to all HIV-positive people in South Africa as a matter of urgency. All such costing and modelling should include the cost of revitalisi­ng and scaling up South Africa’s HIV Counsellin­g and Testing programme.

We also require a massive and sustained public programme of HIV prevention and treatment literacy. Such a programme will be crucial to ensuring that more people get tested for HIV and that people on treatment are better retained on treatment. The TAC is committed to revitalisi­ng its treatment literacy programme, but we will need the help of healthcare workers, Sanac, the Department of Health and donors if such a programme is to reach the required scale.

The TAC thanks the participan­ts, investigat­ors, doctors and nurses in the START trial. START shows the value to society and medicine of running large, predominan­tly publicly funded clinical trials that set out to answer clear questions.

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