What has TB got to do in an AIDS Conference?
Well almost everything. Tuberculosis (TB) remains the most common AIDS-defining illness and the leading cause of death in people living with HIV (PLHIV) with 1 in 5 HIV-associated deaths in 2012 attributed to TB. At least one third of the 35.3 million living PLHIV worldwide are infected with latent TB. An estimated 1.1 million (13%) of the 8.6 million people who developed TB in 2012 were HIV-positive too.
According to the Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP)
Annual Report 2014: "India accounts for about 10% of the global
burden of HIV-associated TB and every year 42000 people die of
TB among TB/HIV coinfected patients. RNTCP has endorsed the
policy of prioritizing to offer rapid molecular test to all
presumptive TB cases among PLHIV for early diagnosis of TB."
Stressing
upon his country’s commitment to working with governments
in the region to strengthen health systems for tackling all
diseases, including HIV and TB, Australia's Deputy High
Commissioner to India, Bernard Philip, told Citizen News Service
(CNS) that, "The Australian Government promotes proven,
cost-effective interventions to reduce the burden of TB, by
improving primary health care, promoting an effective public
health approach to TB management, and by boosting TB detection.
Drug resistant TB and TB-HIV co-infection are difficult and
complex problems, and we need improved surveillance, detection,
diagnosis and treatment in order to fight them effectively."
He
also informed that, “As a symbol of the Australian
Government’s strong commitment to funding research which
can aid global efforts to tackle this disease, it has also
supported vital TB research in India through the Australia India
Strategic Research Fund (AISRF) by putting more than $A2.3
million into a joint project between the Commonwealth Scientific
& Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), in Australia,
and the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, in India,
to investigate point-of-care diagnostic tools for TB.”
The
impact resulting from enormous investment made into HIV is being
undermined by a disease that is both preventable and curable.
Hence it is imperative that there is programmatic intergration
of the strategies aimed at controlling the two diseases so as to
drastically reduce HIV-associated TB deaths.
Speaking
to CNS about integration of services for care and control of TB
and HIV, Dr Mario Raviglione, Director, World Health
Organization (WHO) Global Tuberculosis Programme, said that,
“The post-2015 new global TB strategy of the WHO
reinforces, amongst other things, that instead of two vertical
and straight programmes that do not talk to each other, there
have to be close linkages between AIDS programme and TB
programme in such a way that it guarantees a one stop
point-of-care to those who are in need. The new strategy
reiterates the philosophy of proper patient centric care
–that every single individual has the right to proper
diagnosis, treatment, support and counselling. HIV is
prominently expressed in this strategy and lists special
measures that need to be taken for TB patients who also suffer
from HIV.”
While expressing his happiness about
the prominence which events on ‘TB associated with
HIV’ have been given in the forthcoming XX International
AIDS Conference (AIDS 2014) in Melbourne, Dr Raviglione lamented
that for decades TB had been relatively underplayed or ignored
in the HIV/AIDS community. It is only since the past 3-4 years
that there has been more awareness of the fact that TB is the
number one killer of PLHIV. And yet, even now, surprisingly a
large majority of people, when they speak about HIV/AIDS, ignore
the fact that one fifth of PLHIV may eventually die of TB which
is preventable and curable, regardless of the person being HIV
positive or not.
In fact, the WHO data shows
that less than 50% of the 1.1 million estimated HIV-positive
incident TB cases were identified in 2012 while only 28% of the
estimated TB/HIV cases received antiretroviral therapy (ART).
More than 80% of countries still do not report providing IPT
(isoniazid preventive therapy) to eligible people living with
HIV.
Dr Raviglione expressed his astonishment that,
“ART is still not automatically provided to those PLHIV
who have TB. This is one of the most important recommendations
we are making when we talk about integration of services between
TB and HIV. A TB programme should automatically test TB patients
for HIV. Once a person with TB is screened for HIV and found
positive he/she should automatically be put on ART. We will save
many lives in this way. Also as soon a person tests positive for
HIV he/she should be offered TB testing and potential
prophylaxis for TB should be made automatically. It is
heartening to note that there has been a significant increase in
the past decade on this intervention with as many as 90% TB
patients being tested for HIV in some parts of Africa.”
He
also promoted the use of new diagnostic technologies such as
GeneXpert MTB/RIF for more efficient and timely detection of
HIV-associated TB and multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB). The
geneXpert is of great use for proper and rapid diagnosis of TB
as well as MDR-TB especially in PLHIV because TB in them is more
difficult to diagnose as compared to non HIV patients. If the
test shows rifampicin resistance, treatment for MDR-TB can be
started immediately, thus giving a big benefit in terms of
timely management of the disease.
Dr Raviglione
emphasized upon the importance of disseminating correct
information about TB associated with HIV. He said,
“Perhaps the HIV/AIDS community is not fully aware of the
big risk TB poses to them. PLHIV are already immuno-suppressed
and having TB makes them more vulnerable to other life
threatening infections. People need to be more informed about
this. So if more and more people, especially the caregivers of
PLHIV and TB patients, get the correct information through
conferences like AIDS 2014, then they will not take TB lightly
and understand the importance of early ART in PLHIV co-infected
with TB. If the message is clear and well disseminated then we
will be doing our job.”
Source:
Citizen News Service