HIV i-Base/Treatment Action Group: 2012 Pipeline Report
The report reveals deep gaps between scientific promise and program delivery
Recent advances in biomedical HIV, hepatitis C virus, and tuberculosis prevention and treatment are not reaching those who need them most; Political leaders continue to break domestic, global health commitments.
WASHINGTON, D.C., July 21, 2012 – On the eve of the XIX
International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C., a new report
by HIV i-Base (U.K.) and Treatment Action Group (TAG) (U.S.)
reveals the deepening gulf between new scientific advances that
make it possible to prevent, treat, and in some cases cure
people living with HIV, hepatitis C virus (HCV), and
tuberculosis (TB), and access to these where they are most
needed. According to Polly Clayden of i-Base and Mark Harrington
of TAG, “the abundance of promising advances documented in
this year’s i-Base/TAG 2012 Pipeline Report may
seem unattainably out of reach to many of the millions of people
who need them most. It will be the task of the activists,
implementers, policy makers, and scientists attending this
year’s International AIDS Conference...to work together to
turn the tide so that everyone who needs high-quality treatment
and prevention interventions for the global HIV, hepatitis C
virus (HCV), and tuberculosis pandemics receives them.”
Pointing to the recent dramatic demonstration that earlier
anti-HIV therapy can reduce transmission of the virus by 96%
among stable sexual partners with differing HIV status, Clayden
and Harrington comment, “Three papers published in the
past year provide the scientific, public health, and policy
framework for accelerating the response to the HIV pandemic such
that within a few years the spread of HIV can be reversed,
saving millions of lives and billions of dollars, using existing
antiretroviral therapy earlier and more broadly around the
world. The only thing holding us back is the lack of economic
and political leadership at the highest levels.”
The authors point out that while 7 million people are receiving
lifesaving HIV treatment, the new scientific results indicate
that up to 27 million more will need such therapy to realize the
promise of earlier treatment for both individuals and public
health. More preliminary results also suggest that targeting HIV
prophylaxis for high-risk HIV-negative individuals can also
prevent transmission, when administered in well-organized and
comprehensive prevention programs, as indicated by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) approval, earlier this month, of
the first two-drug combination licensed for HIV prevention.
Still more preliminarily, a single patient, Timothy Brown, has
been cured of HIV infection after receiving an immune system
transplant with stem cells genetically resistant to HIV. Brown
has remained off HIV treatment for more than five years with no
ongoing HIV replication detected.
There are many promising new HIV therapy candidates in the
pipeline, as indicated in Simon Collins’s article on adult
antiretrovirals, with at least 15 new drugs and combinations in
phase II and III studies. In her article on the pediatric HIV
pipeline, Polly Clayden demonstrates that some sponsors have
made significant progress in more rapidly developing new drug
options for children living with HIV. “Accelerating the
regulatory approval gap between rich countries and poor ones,
and between adult HIV approvals and pediatric availability, is
one of the most important recommendations in this year’s
Pipeline,” commented Clayden. “Children and
people in developing countries should be given the best chance
for durable responses to therapy, with 21st-century drugs, not
forced to take second-class, toxic, and inferior drugs from the
1990s just because they are cheaper or were developed
first.”
Nathan Geffen of South Africa’s Treatment Action Campaign
(TAC) emphasizes the many years that can elapse needlessly
between approval of new HIV drugs in Europe and America and
their availability in countries such as South Africa, which has
both the world’s largest HIV epidemic and its largest HIV
treatment program. He points out that regulatory inefficiency by
South Africa’s Medicines Control Council (the
country’s equivalent of the FDA) delays both the opening
of critical clinical trials and the approval of safer and more
effective new drugs.
Richard Jefferys covers this year’s groundbreaking FDA
review of Truvada for preexposure HIV prophylaxis (PrEP), HIV
cure research, and the ongoing struggle to discover and develop
safe and effective vaccines to prevent HIV transmission. For the
first time in three decades, there are concrete indications that
progress is at hand in biomedical HIV prevention, vaccination,
and cure.
Moving to the hepatitis C virus (HCV) pandemic, which affects
over 160 million people worldwide and is the leading cause of
death among people with HIV in America and Europe, Tracy Swan
and Karyn Kaplan provide a sweeping overview of the explosive
developments in HCV combination therapy and cure, with over 25
direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) in development for HCV. Last
year’s regulatory approvals of the first two protease
inhibitors to treat HCV marked the cutting edge of a tidal wave
of new DAAs, oral treatments for HCV that can cure more cases
than ever before, sometimes without the former therapy backbone
of peginterferon alfa, which is both expensive (over
US$20,000/year) and highly toxic. The HCV DAA revolution makes
it possible for the first time to envisage eradication of
HCV—which has no natural animal hosts, and can be cured in
some cases in just a few months with two or three DAAs—in
the coming two decades. Swan and Kaplan caution that currently
infrastructure and reimbursement mechanisms to cover treatment
and care costs for people with HCV are lacking almost
everywhere, and must be rapidly expanded to treat and cure the
millions who are living with HCV.
Tuberculosis research has undergone a renaissance, particularly
in TB drugs and regimens, but hardly a revolution (unlike HCV).
Erica Lessem shows significant progress in new TB drug and
regimen development, with two new drugs—bedaquiline from
Janssen and delamanid from Otsuka—being filed with
regulators for accelerated approval to treat drug-resistant
forms of TB; the first two novel combination studies in decades
having been started by the TB Alliance; and a two-drug,
twelve-dose, curative regimen newly recommended by the U.S.
government for prevention of latent TB infection (LTBI). As slow
progress in TB diagnostics and vaccine research reveals,
investment in TB research is far too low to permit rapid
progress.
“We call on political leaders worldwide to step up
implementation of new scientific discoveries to bridge the
global and domestic prevention and treatment gaps,”
concluded Clayden and Harrington.
# # #
The 2012 Pipeline Report: HIV, Hepatitis C Virus (HCV), and
Tuberculosis (TB) Drugs, Diagnostics, Vaccines, and Preventive
Technologies in Development
by Polly Clayden, Simon Collins, Colleen Daniels, Nathan Geffen,
Mark Harrington, Richard Jefferys, Coco Jervis, Karyn Kaplan,
Erica Lessem, and Tracy Swan is available online at:
http://www.treatmentactiongroup.org/pipeline-report/2012
and as an interactive web report at:
http://www.pipelinereport.org
# # #
About HIV i-Base
HIV i-Base is a London-based HIV treatment activist
organization. HIV i-Base works in the United Kingdom and
internationally to ensure that people living with HIV are
actively engaged in their own treatment and medical care and are
included in policy discussions about HIV treatment
recommendations and access.
http://www.i-base.info
About TAG
The Treatment Action Group (TAG) is an
independent AIDS research and policy think tank fighting for
better treatment, a vaccine, and a cure for AIDS. TAG works to
ensure that all people with HIV receive lifesaving treatment,
care, and information. We are science-based treatment activists
working to expand and accelerate vital research and effective
community engagement with research and policy institutions. TAG
catalyzes open collective action by all affected communities,
scientists, and policy makers to end AIDS. TAG is a nonprofit,
tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organization.
http://www.treatmentactiongroup.org