Daily Dispatch

Call for early treatment for all with HIV

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EVERYONE with HIV should be given anti-retroviral drugs as soon as possible after diagnosis, meaning 37 million people worldwide should be on treatment, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) said yesterday.

Recent clinical trials have confirmed that early drug use extends the lives of those with the Aidscausin­g virus and cuts the risk of disease transmissi­on to partners, the WHO said, setting out the new goal for its 194 member states.

Under previous WHO guidelines, which limited treatment to those whose immune cell counts had fallen below a certain threshold, 28 million people were deemed eligible for anti-retroviral therapy (ART).

All people at “substantia­l” risk of contractin­g HIV should also be given preventive ART, not just men who have sex with men, the WHO said.

The new guidelines are a central plank of the United Nations agency’s aim to end the Aids epidemic by 2030.

“Everybody living with HIV has the right to lifesaving treatment. The new guidelines are a very important step towards ensuring that all people living with HIV have immediate access to anti-retroviral treatment,” UNAids executive director Michel Sidibe said.

“According to UNAids estimates, expanding ART to all people living with HIV and expanding prevention choices can help avert 21 million Aids-related deaths and 28 million new infections by 2030.”

The move will lead to a sharp increase in demand for ART medicines, which are typically given as a three-drug cocktail to avoid the risk of the virus developing resistance.

Major suppliers of HIV drugs include Gilead Sciences , ViiV Healthcare, which is majority-owned by GlaxoSmith­Kline, and multiple Indian generic manufactur­ers.

The medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) welcomed the WHO’s “treat-all” plan, which it believes will prevent many HIV-positive people in poorer countries from falling through the treatment net.

MSF said its experience showed that a third of people who were diagnosed with HIV, but not eligible to start treatment, never returned to the clinic.

The charity also warned that making the new recommenda­tion a reality would require dramatical­ly increased financial support from donors and government­s.

The WHO estimates that by 2020 low- and lowermiddl­e income countries will need $18.4-billion (about R255-billion) annually for the expanded HIV fight. However, fast-tracking the response should yield economic returns of $15 (R200) per dollar invested, based on improved health and infections averted.

Since it began spreading 30 years ago, Aids has killed about 40 million people worldwide. — Reuters

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