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Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to Impact

BACKGROUND: Through major efforts to reduce costs and expand access to antiretroviral therapy worldwide, widespread delivery of effective treatment to people living with HIV/AIDS is now conceivable even in severely resource-constrained settings. However, the potential epidemiologic impact of treatme...

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Autores principales: Salomon, Joshua A, Hogan, Daniel R, Stover, John, Stanecki, Karen A, Walker, Neff, Ghys, Peter D, Schwartländer, Bernhard
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC543462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15647780
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0020016
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author Salomon, Joshua A
Hogan, Daniel R
Stover, John
Stanecki, Karen A
Walker, Neff
Ghys, Peter D
Schwartländer, Bernhard
author_facet Salomon, Joshua A
Hogan, Daniel R
Stover, John
Stanecki, Karen A
Walker, Neff
Ghys, Peter D
Schwartländer, Bernhard
author_sort Salomon, Joshua A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Through major efforts to reduce costs and expand access to antiretroviral therapy worldwide, widespread delivery of effective treatment to people living with HIV/AIDS is now conceivable even in severely resource-constrained settings. However, the potential epidemiologic impact of treatment in the context of a broader strategy for HIV/AIDS control has not yet been examined. In this paper, we quantify the opportunities and potential risks of large-scale treatment roll-out. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We used an epidemiologic model of HIV/AIDS, calibrated to sub-Saharan Africa, to investigate a range of possible positive and negative health outcomes under alternative scenarios that reflect varying implementation of prevention and treatment. In baseline projections, reflecting “business as usual,” the numbers of new infections and AIDS deaths are expected to continue rising. In two scenarios representing treatment-centered strategies, with different assumptions about the impact of treatment on transmissibility and behavior, the change in the total number of new infections through 2020 ranges from a 10% increase to a 6% reduction, while the number of AIDS deaths through 2020 declines by 9% to 13%. A prevention-centered strategy provides greater reductions in incidence (36%) and mortality reductions similar to those of the treatment-centered scenarios by 2020, but more modest mortality benefits over the next 5 to 10 years. If treatment enhances prevention in a combined response, the expected benefits are substantial—29 million averted infections (55%) and 10 million averted deaths (27%) through the year 2020. However, if a narrow focus on treatment scale-up leads to reduced effectiveness of prevention efforts, the benefits of a combined response are considerably smaller—9 million averted infections (17%) and 6 million averted deaths (16%). Combining treatment with effective prevention efforts could reduce the resource needs for treatment dramatically in the long term. In the various scenarios the numbers of people being treated in 2020 ranges from 9.2 million in a treatment-only scenario with mixed effects, to 4.2 million in a combined response scenario with positive treatment–prevention synergies. CONCLUSIONS: These analyses demonstrate the importance of integrating expanded care activities with prevention activities if there are to be long-term reductions in the number of new HIV infections and significant declines in AIDS mortality. Treatment can enable more effective prevention, and prevention makes treatment affordable. Sustained progress in the global fight against HIV/AIDS will be attained only through a comprehensive response.
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spelling pubmed-5434622005-01-11 Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to Impact Salomon, Joshua A Hogan, Daniel R Stover, John Stanecki, Karen A Walker, Neff Ghys, Peter D Schwartländer, Bernhard PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: Through major efforts to reduce costs and expand access to antiretroviral therapy worldwide, widespread delivery of effective treatment to people living with HIV/AIDS is now conceivable even in severely resource-constrained settings. However, the potential epidemiologic impact of treatment in the context of a broader strategy for HIV/AIDS control has not yet been examined. In this paper, we quantify the opportunities and potential risks of large-scale treatment roll-out. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We used an epidemiologic model of HIV/AIDS, calibrated to sub-Saharan Africa, to investigate a range of possible positive and negative health outcomes under alternative scenarios that reflect varying implementation of prevention and treatment. In baseline projections, reflecting “business as usual,” the numbers of new infections and AIDS deaths are expected to continue rising. In two scenarios representing treatment-centered strategies, with different assumptions about the impact of treatment on transmissibility and behavior, the change in the total number of new infections through 2020 ranges from a 10% increase to a 6% reduction, while the number of AIDS deaths through 2020 declines by 9% to 13%. A prevention-centered strategy provides greater reductions in incidence (36%) and mortality reductions similar to those of the treatment-centered scenarios by 2020, but more modest mortality benefits over the next 5 to 10 years. If treatment enhances prevention in a combined response, the expected benefits are substantial—29 million averted infections (55%) and 10 million averted deaths (27%) through the year 2020. However, if a narrow focus on treatment scale-up leads to reduced effectiveness of prevention efforts, the benefits of a combined response are considerably smaller—9 million averted infections (17%) and 6 million averted deaths (16%). Combining treatment with effective prevention efforts could reduce the resource needs for treatment dramatically in the long term. In the various scenarios the numbers of people being treated in 2020 ranges from 9.2 million in a treatment-only scenario with mixed effects, to 4.2 million in a combined response scenario with positive treatment–prevention synergies. CONCLUSIONS: These analyses demonstrate the importance of integrating expanded care activities with prevention activities if there are to be long-term reductions in the number of new HIV infections and significant declines in AIDS mortality. Treatment can enable more effective prevention, and prevention makes treatment affordable. Sustained progress in the global fight against HIV/AIDS will be attained only through a comprehensive response. Public Library of Science 2005-01 2005-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC543462/ /pubmed/15647780 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0020016 Text en Copyright: © 2005 Salomon et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Salomon, Joshua A
Hogan, Daniel R
Stover, John
Stanecki, Karen A
Walker, Neff
Ghys, Peter D
Schwartländer, Bernhard
Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to Impact
title Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to Impact
title_full Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to Impact
title_fullStr Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to Impact
title_full_unstemmed Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to Impact
title_short Integrating HIV Prevention and Treatment: From Slogans to Impact
title_sort integrating hiv prevention and treatment: from slogans to impact
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC543462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15647780
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0020016
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