Call to step up the pace of TB-HIV collaborative activities
“We must focus upon individual human beings rather than on individual diseases of TB and HIV. A person centric approach is bound to work together than a disease centric approach,” said Mark Dybul, Executive Director, Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria at a high level WHO consultation, held in conjunction with 20th International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2014), to discuss policies to catalyze the response for elimination of TB deaths among people living with HIV (PLHIV).
TB remains the leading cause of HIV-associated deaths,
accounting for an estimated 320,000 HIV-related deaths in 2012.
Fewer than half of the 1.1 million estimated HIV-positive
incident TB cases were identified in 2012 with only 28% of
estimated TB/HIV cases receiving anti retro viral therapy (ART).
More than 80% of countries still do not report providing
Isoniazid Preventive Therapy (IPT) to eligible PLHIV. The impact
resulting from enormous investments made into HIV is being
undermined by a disease that is both preventable and curable.
A conglomeration of policy makers, donor agencies, researches
and civil society advocates discussed the way forward for TB-HIV
collaborative activities, which first started in 2004.
Gottfried Hirnschall of WHO favoured going
beyond silos and moving from ‘collaborative TB/HIV
activities’ to ‘joint TB/HIV programming.’
According to him, there must be joint resource mobilization,
programme planning and supervision; renewed political
leadership and increased convergence between TB and HIV
programme stakeholders at national and sub national levels;
greater focus on accelerated and tailored service delivery to
expand coverage and optimize resources; and integrated
monitoring and evaluation. This could help us scale up in a more
rational and efficient manner.
Mark Dybul shared that, “It took the Global Fund to fight
for 10 years to get collaborative HIV TB activities endorsed by
countries after a lot of resistance. Now we are in a position to
completely control (though not eradicate) these two infections
through innovations in: diagnostics and treatments;
inplementation tools for active case finding and ensuring
quality control; and partnerships between different
organizations. Not only TB and HIV but all public health
communities should come together for the common good of
individual people suffering from one or multiple diseases. We
cannot afford to separate the two diseases any longer.”
Ambassador Deborah Birx, US Global AIDS
Coordinator insisted that integration of the two programmes are
critical for saving lives. She found it incredibly unacceptable
that even after 12 years of PEPFAR and Global Fund funding we
are not able to provide ART to all PLHIV coinfected with TB. Our
goal should be 100% coverage. She felt the need to engage all
partners including communities and civil society to (i) generate
reliable data to inform programmatic decisions to reach all
eligible PLHIV coinfected with TB, (ii) rapid scale up of
combination prevention—ART +IPT (iii) improved coverage
for neglected populations (iv) promote one stop shop models for
TB and HIV services which also means that maternal health
clinics must diagnose HIV as well as TB in pregnant women and
not make them access the two services at two different places.
We also have a commitment to save mothers’ and
children’s lives.
Anthony Fauci, Director National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) elaborated upon the role
of biomedical research in integrating TB/HIV programmes.
Discovery by biomedical research of new and improved
interventions can get into the bucket of implementation.
NIAID funds a global network of 6 major HIV/AIDS clinical trials
networks, three of which have been expanded to include both TB
and TB/HIV, with a view to support research for fighting the
dual epidemic of TB and HIV.
Dr Fauci explained that key HIV/AIDS-TB research areas include
better understanding of TB pathogenesis; new TB diagnostics
which are point of care, simple, accurate and inexpensive and
which can detect TB in clinical specimens from multiple body
sites; improved TB therapeutics with shorter and simpler
treatment regimens having fewer side effects and no drug drug
interactions with ARVs; and TB prevention tools like safe and
effective vaccines against all forms of TB.
Lucy Cheshire of TB Advocacy Consortium was
confident that civil society in collaboration with governments
and donors can take up the challenge to scale up TB-HIV
collaborative activities in order to have a world free of TB and
HIV.
Peter Godfrey Faussett of UNAIDS beautifully
summed up the consultation by underlining the importance of
going beyond just scale up of ART in PLHIV coinfected with TB
and finding and treating HIV-negative people with TB quickly and
early, as they are often the ones who are the source of TB
infection to those living with HIV.
Let us hope that the ideas shared at the consultation will lead
to an evidence-based, rights-based and gender transformative
response to HIV/AIDS, TB and effective public health programmes
for all, irrespective of gender, age, race, ethnicity, religious
or spiritual beliefs, sexual orientation and gender identity as
envisaged in the Melbourne Declaration.
Source:
Citizen News Service