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HIV Treatment as Prevention: Optimising the Impact of Expanded HIV Treatment Programmes

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TLDR
In re-evaluating the allocation of ART in light of the new data about ART preventing transmission, the goal should be to create policies that maximise epidemiological and clinical benefit while still being feasible, affordable, acceptable, and equitable.
Abstract
Until now, decisions about how to allocate ART have largely been based on maximising the therapeutic benefit of ART for patients. Since the results of the HPTN 052 study showed efficacy of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in preventing HIV transmission, there has been increased interest in the benefits of ART not only as treatment, but also in prevention. Resources for expanding ART in the short term may be limited, so the question is how to generate the most prevention benefit from realistic potential increases in the availability of ART. Although not a formal systematic review, here we review different ways in which access to ART could be expanded by prioritising access to particular groups based on clinical or behavioural factors. For each group we consider (i) the clinical and epidemiological benefits, (ii) the potential feasibility, acceptability, and equity, and (iii) the affordability and cost-effectiveness of prioritising ART access for that group. In re-evaluating the allocation of ART in light of the new data about ART preventing transmission, the goal should be to create policies that maximise epidemiological and clinical benefit while still being feasible, affordable, acceptable, and equitable.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Antiretroviral Therapy Uptake, Attrition, Adherence and Outcomes among HIV-Infected Female Sex Workers: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: It is suggested that FSWs can achieve levels of ART uptake, retention, adherence, and treatment response comparable to that seen among women in the general population, but these data are from only a few research settings.
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"You are wasting our drugs": health service barriers to HIV treatment for sex workers in Zimbabwe

TL;DR: Sensitising health workers through specialised training, refining referral systems from sex-worker friendly clinics into the national system, and providing opportunities for SW to collectively organise for improved treatment and rights might help alleviate the barriers to treatment initiation and attention currently faced by SW.
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Phylogenetic inferences on HIV-1 transmission: implications for the design of prevention and treatment interventions.

TL;DR: Migration and globalization has contributed to the spread of non-B subtypes contributing to 20–60% of new infections in Europe, Asia and America.
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HIV treatment as prevention: Principles of good HIV epidemiology modelling for public health decision-making in all modes of prevention and evaluation

TL;DR: It is hoped that the principles described here will become a shared resource that facilitates constructive discussions about the policy implications that emerge from HIV epidemiology modelling results, and that promotes joint understanding about when modelling is useful as a tool in quantifying HIV epidemiological outcomes and improving prevention programming.
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Combination Prevention: New Hope for Stopping the Epidemic

TL;DR: “treatment as prevention” for adult-to-adult transmission reduction includes expanded HIV testing, linkage to care, antiretroviral coverage, retention in care, adherence to therapy, and management of key co-morbidities such as depression and substance use.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling the impact on the HIV epidemic of treating discordant couples with antiretrovirals to prevent transmission.

TL;DR: The effectiveness of a discordant couples intervention in reducing incidence will vary among countries due to differences in HIV prevalence and the percentage of couples that are discordant (i.e. degree of discordancy), and this model provides a quantitative framework for identifying countries most likely to benefit from treating discordants couples to prevent transmission.
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The importance of context: model projections on how microbicide impact could be affected by the underlying epidemiologic and behavioral situation in 2 African settings.

TL;DR: It is important to develop and evaluate microbicides that are efficacious against STIs, however, even with the same patterns of use, a microbicide’s impact and the importance of its STI efficacy will vary considerably between settings.
Journal Article

Low CD4+ T-cell count and high HIV viral load precede the development of tuberculosis disease in a cohort of HIV-positive Ethiopians.

TL;DR: In this paper, a longitudinal study of 804 adult factory workers (95 HIV-positive, 709 HIV-negative), who were followed every 6 months for a median of 3.8 years, was conducted to study changes in biological markers of HIV infection progression before and after developing TB disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence rate and risk factors for loss to follow-up in HIV-infected patients from five French clinical centres in Northern France - January 1997 to December 2006.

TL;DR: The findings will help clinicians recognize patients who require additional support for retention in care, including younger patients, injection drug users, people of sub-Saharan African origin, patients who are healthier at enrolment and patients who do not adhere to HAART during follow-up.
Journal Article

Low CD4+ T-cell count and high HIV viral load precede the development of tuberculosis disease in a cohort of HIV-positive ethiopians.

TL;DR: In this cohort, HIV-infected Ethiopians who developed TB disease already had low CD4 counts and high viral load prior to the diagnosis of TB, and following TB treatment, plasma viral load remained persistently elevated despite clinical resolution of TB disease.
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