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The World of HIV/AIDS

Photos (good ones) by Malcolm


Overview*
 History and Epidemiology
 Existing prevention
strategies
 Existing treatment
strategies
 Future treatment and
prevention strategies

* Heavily spiced with politics,


economics, ethics, odd ideas
and opinions
End of 2005,
UNAIDS

Total: 38.6M
Sub-Saharan Africa: 24.5
M
Asia: 8.3M
LatAm and Carib: 1.9M

90% of infections in SSA, Asia, and LatAm and Carib


*First report
in MMWR on
June 5, 1981

* 11 MMWR
Reports by
September
1982
The “Race” is On: April 23,
1984

PREDICTIONS
 Blood test, widely available 6 months YES
 “We hope to have such a vaccine ready for testing in approximately
two years,” HHS Secretary Margaret Heckler YES, BUT NO
 “What we have at the moment is not particularly of great benefit to
people who have the disease…but it hopefully will be in a short
while,” Asst. Sec. of Health, Edward Brandt NO
The #1 Problem

9
subtypes

If HIV were TB, a cure would exist


If HIV were HBV or polio, a vaccine would exist today
Get Inside the Enemy’s
HIV’s Profile
Head
Objectives: Copy and Spread

Body Type: Retrovirus, RNA

Attributes: No brains, morals or


political agenda

Desired residence: Anywhere

Turn Ons: Anal Sex, Vaginal Sex,


Injecting Drugs, Pregnancy

Turn Offs: Condoms, ARVs, Clean


needles, Immune System
We Aren’t the World

 Countries, companies, research


institutions have different agendas and
needs
 Organizing scientists is like herding cats
 Politics continues to trump science
The Big Logistical Problems
 Most HIV+ don’t know infected

 Only 1.3 million of 5.5 million in


need receive ARVs as of 12/05

 Scaling up treatment: monitoring,


training, FDCs

 Not much $ in vaccines,


microbicides, generics

 Prevention efforts woefully lacking


What Drives HIV’s Spread?
Sub-Saharan Africa has 10
countries with adult prevalence
>10%

Namibia: 19.6%
Botswana: 24.1%
South Africa: 18.8%
CAR: 10.7%
Swaziland: 33.4%
Lesotho: 23.2%
Zambia: 17.0 %
Malawi: 14.1%
Zimbabwe: 20.1%
Mozambique: 16.1%
Why the high Prevalence in
Sub-Saharan Africa?

 Concurrent sexual partnerships both male and


female
 Intergenerational sex: Sugar daddies
 Migration and poverty
 Concurrent untreated STDs (HSV-2)
 Lack of circumcision
 Sex work and clients
General Population Multi-Partner
Sex in Last Year

Males Females HIV %


Country (%) (%)
Kenya 45 20 16
Zambia 43 29 26
Zimbabwe 43 16 34
UNAIDS
Epidemiology: Gender differences
10
Male
Female
8
JUN/JUL 92
Prevalence (%)

<9 10-14 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-39 40-49


Age and gender specific prevalence of HIV infection in rural South
Africa

Source : Abdool Karim Q et al, AIDS 1992


HSV-2 and Circumcision
 2 high
prevalence
cities, 2
low
 ~1000
males and
~1000
females in
each
(Buve, AIDS, 2001)
Circumcising Adults?

 Orange Farm, South


Africa, August 2005
Asia

 Huge populations in India and China: >1/3 of world


 Injecting drug use: heroin producing
 Sex work
 Thai Success
India
 Different
epidemics
 5.7 million
HIV+
 Adult
prevalence:
0.9%
China

 Blood plasma scandal


 IDUs
Southeast Asia

 Thailand: sex workers and IDUs


 Myanmar/Burma: big heroin
producer
 Cambodia: No IDUs
 Vietnam: IDUs
HIV Moves with Heroin
Rapid Increase of HIV among
Injecting Drug Users
HIV prevalence
80%
1989

70%
1990 1989
1990 1996
60%

50%
1988
40%

30%

20%
1989
1989
10%
1987 1988 1995
1988
0%
Yunnan Manipur Myanmar Bangkok, Chiang Nikolayev,
Province, State, Thailand Rai, Ukraine
China India Thailand
Preventing an IDU epidemic
slows or averts a sex work
epidemic…
Projected epidemic in Jakarta with and w/o IDUs

120,000
s

Pisani, FHI Indonesia


Doubling number of clients produces
more rapidly growing epidemic
By 2030,
13.2% of
males,
5.4% of
females
HIV+

80

Brown/Wiwat, East-West Center


But prevention must be
sustained..
If condom use falls, HIV rises, even in Thailand

Supposing condom
use drops to 60%
starting 1998

1400
Latin America and
Caribbean
Caribbean: highest
prevalence outside Sub-
Saharan Africa

Latin America: Similar to


Asia, but little IDU

Drivers:
• Migration
• Poverty
• Sex tourism
• Clients of sex work
Contrasts Abound • MSM
Evolution of Epidemic

 Starts in Haiti, 1982 cases surface


The
Caribbean:
Heterosexual
Haiti’s Successes

 Lowered prevalence
 Pioneered treatment of poor
Dominican Republic’s
Challenges

 Bateyes
 Sex work
 Treatment programs
Puerto Rico

 IDU driven
 Topnotch research

 Topnotch care--for non-IDUs


Mexico and Central America

 MSM
 Migration
 Wars, Gangs
 Special
populations
 Sex Work
Honduras Hotspot

 Garifunas  MSM
 Migration  Sex workers
 Prisons
 Regional wars
Mexico

 MSM
 Anti-homophobia campaign
 Migration
Guatemala:
Treatment and Care Uneven
 Centralized
 Drug supply
 Discrimination
 Transition
issues
South America

 Brazil > ½
cases
 Andean
region MSM
 Southern
cone was IDU
Brazil

 Pioneered universal access  Sex-positive


 Escalating costs prevention
Argentina

 Epidemics change
 Was IDU cocaine and MSM
 Now primarily heterosexual
Peru

 Research magnet
 MSM
 Leading researchers from community
One Size Doesn’t Fit All
Prevention Efforts Woefully
Lacking

 Scattershot targeting of high-risk groups


 Treatment benefits prevention
 9 billion more condoms/year needed
 Harm reduction for 3.6% of IDUs
 ARVs for 3% of pregnant HIV+
Treatment Issues: Rich vs.
Poor

AZT
d4T RT
ddI NRTI
ddC NNRTI
NVP PI
EFV FI
IND CD4
SQV CCR5
3TC VL
FTC
T-20
The Cocktails Work

40

Frank Palella/HOPS
Resistance and Side Effects
Other Treatment Limitations
for Rich and Poor Countries
Alike
 Many HIV+ don’t know infected
 Adherence: Simpler regimens needed
 Training of clinicians
 Proper monitoring
 No cure exists
The Story of Henan

Henan Province had 20% dropout first year, no 3TC,


and NVP resistance in first 9 months was 20%-30%.
Solution: Direct Observation of
Treatment Strategy (DOTS)
Solution: FDC
(Fixed Dose Combination)
Solution: Proper training and
monitoring
New Players

$5.5 Billion
Committed
President’s Emergency
Plan for AIDS Relief
$15 billion/5 years
(PEPFAR) $150
Million
To Fund,
>$500
Million to
HIV
Vaccine
Mind the Gap
Future Treatment
Possibilities
New Targets: Integrase, APOBEC-3B
The Search for an AIDS
Vaccine: A Long Battle

Discover, September 1990


WPost,
6/21/88

WPost, 5/21/90 Nature, 6/23/88


Evidence that an AIDS vaccine
is possible

 Exposed,
uninfected
 Protected
monkeys
 Longterm
nonprogressor
s
Global HIV Vaccine
Enterprise

 Serious new money from Gates and


NIH (Total: >$500 million)
 Shared strategic plan
 Greater collaboration
Future Prevention
Possibilities
• Circumcision
• Drugs as
Prophylaxis
• PrEP
• Acyclovir
• Microbicides
• Acute Infection
Meeting slammed as
circus…It is the
greatest show on
Earth

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