How can we tailor the delivery of the TB/HIV package to IDU?
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Transcript How can we tailor the delivery of the TB/HIV package to IDU?
How can we tailor the delivery
of the TB/HIV package to IDU?
David H.-U. Haerry
European AIDS Treatment Group
(European Community Advisory Board,
Policy Working Group)
Eastern Europe & Central Asia
1,4 million HIV infected by end of 2004.
490’000 women, 210’000 new infections &
60’000 deaths in 2004.
Ukraine
Exponential increase of epidemic since
2000 (+7%) – 2002 (+25%).
In 2003, 30% of new infections heterosexual
transmission (within IDU subpopulation).
10 – 15% of TB cases in Ukraine MDR.
TB leading cause of death among PWAs,
50% of AIDS-related deaths are due to TB.
45’000 patients in need of ARV, 1500
treated (GFATM component).
Russia
70% of all HIV infections registered in Eastern
Europe/Central Asia.
Estimated 860’000 PWHAs in Russia, 80% aged
15 – 29, >1/3 women (Dec. 2003).
1.5 – 3 million Russian IDUs (1 – 2% of
population), 30 – 40% use non sterile syringes.
In 2004, 80% of reported HIV cases among IDU.
70% sexually active.
Sharp increase of pregnant women with HIV.
Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania
Latvia: 5-fold increase 1999 – 2002 (2300).
Estonia: 1999 12 new cases, 2003: 840.
Lithuania: 2001 72 new cases, 2002
increase more than 5-fold.
Infections mostly due to injecting drug use,
sexual transmission is gaining ground.
Eastern Europe / Central Asia
90% of HIV cases caused by injecting drug use.
<1% of HIV-positive IDUs have access to ARV treatment
(or medical care in general).
TB patients are 10 times more likely to have MDR-TB than
in the rest of the world.
Estonia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia and
Uzbekistan: MDR up to 14%.
79% of MDR-TB cases are "super strains", resistant to at
least three of the four main drugs used to cure TB.
Kaliningrad: highest documented HIV prevalence within
Russia. 70 – 80% of HIV-infected IDUs have had hepatitis
C exposure.
Treatment access in the region
11% of patients in need of ARV are getting
treatment.
Due to legal restrictions &
discrimination, HIV-positive IDUs have
limited or no access to treatment.
Problems we are facing
Conflict healthcare priorities - current drug
policy.
Double-stigma in society.
Discrimination in medical institutions.
Fear of police harassment.
Unwillingness of medical infrastructure to
meet the demands of this patient group.
Main barriers for equal access to
HAART
No political commitment to meet the requirements of the
epidemic.
Repressive drug policies supersede the principles of public
health.
High prices for ARV and diagnostic equipment.
No national protocols on HIV treatment and care that meet
international standards focusing IDU patients.
Vertical and centralised AIDS-service infrastructure.
Illegal substitution treatment programmes (Russia).
Limited number of ST programmes.
Limited NGO involvement into HIV care and treatment.
Stigma and discrimination within medical institutions.
Ukraine – assessment on TB
treatment in IDUs
Artur Ovsepyan, All-Ukrainian Network of PWHAs, 2005
AIDS-centres, TB hospitals and drug-addiction clinics in 13 regions of
Ukraine.
40 medical institutions assessed.
14 have access to opiate analgetics.
13 have license for storage and prescription of opiate medications,
2 are planning to obtain license.
2 medical institutions prescribe buprenorphine for ST – Kherson and
Odessa drug addiction clinics.
16 patients received ST with buprenorphine in 2004.
2540 patients have interrupted TB treatment because of drugaddiction (expelled from hospital because of drug-use).
420 TB patients with HIV co-infection that have interrupted TB
treatment because of drug-use.
Conclusions
(based on assessment)
TB and AIDS-service infrastructure are
desintegrated and parallel in Ukraine.
TB and HIV services do not have legal or
administrative authority to ensure access to
opiates as part of palliative care and ST.
Clear evidence: most IDU patients cannot receive
appropriate TB care without access to ST.
Urgent need to overcome these barriers
a) to provide required medical care for IDUs
b) to overcome of TB/HIV epidemic.
Brazil
São Paolo: epicenter of injection-driven epidemic, 50% of
all HIV cases in Brazil.
Assessment has shown that 69% of all people on
treatment successfully followed treatment procedures.
Decentralized and widely available “user-friendly” network
of clinics (up to 300 day clinics across the country).
Development of a harm reduction strategy on national
scale.
Effective integration of harm reduction projects in care
programs (incl. hepatitis vaccination etc).
Creation of a national drug-user organisation with strong
support of health professionals and local authorities.
Key factor of Brazilian success
Government commitment to provide
universal and equal access to treatment
as part of the overall strategy to fight HIV
in the country.
Recommendation:
Need of a comprehensive care programme,
including
TB treatment & prevention – isoniacid?
Hepatitis treatment & prevention.
HIV/AIDS treatment & prevention.
Effective harm reduction & substitution
programmes, including prison settings.
Access to safe conception methods.
Requirements
Support community-based advocacy, education and mobilisation.
Promote international care standards for HIV-TB-Hepatitis co-infection.
Promote reference centres for integrated HIV-TB-Hepatitis care.
Promote substitution programmes as integrated part of the TB/HIV
service kit for IDUs (one stop shopping model).
Perform ARV/TB/hepatitis drugs – street drug interaction studies.
Coordinate ARV-TB-hepatitis drug provision at affordable prices; plan
first-, second-line and salvage regimens.
Invest in training: health care professionals & patient organisations.
Conclusions
IDUs must be identified as a special
category of patients with specific needs.
Interaction studies in ARV/TB/Hepatitis
treatment – street drug must be performed.
ST access in TB / HIV medical services is a
cornerstone of effective HAART and TB
treatment for IDUs and a vital factor for
overcoming the TB/HIV epidemic in the CIS
region.