WHO
ramps up HIV drug push with call for early treatment for all
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[September 30, 2015]
By Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA (Reuters) - 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 Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday.
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Recent clinical trials have confirmed that early drug use extends
the lives of those with the AIDS-causing virus and cuts the risk of
disease transmission to partners, the WHO said in a statement
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 life-saving treatment.
The new guidelines are a very important step towards ensuring that
all people living with HIV have immediate access to anti-retroviral
treatment," said Michel Sidibe, executive director of UNAIDS.
"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.
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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 lower-middle income
countries will need $18.4 billion annually for the expanded HIV
fight. However, fast-tracking the response should yield economic
returns of $15 per dollar invested, based on improved health and
infections averted.
Since it began spreading 30 years ago, AIDS has killed around 40
million people worldwide.
(Additional reporting by Ben Hirschler in London; editing by Tom
Heneghan and Jason Neely)
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