Study Reveals Benefits of Early HIV Treatment
Results of a new
study shows the additional benefits of providing early antiretroviral treatment
to HIV-infected individuals. Starting treatment early when their immune systems
are healthier delays AIDS-related health events like chronic herpes simplex virus
and tuberculosis, as well as death.
Additionally,
researchers found that earlier HIV treatment is also cost-effective because it
increases survival, prevents costly opportunistic infections and averts
transmission of the virus to uninfected individuals.
The new study was
conducted by further analyses of the landmark NIH-funded
treatment-as-prevention study (HPTN 052).
Initial results
from the HPTN 052 study, which was announced in 2011, demonstrated that earlier
use of antiretrovirals by HIV-infected heterosexuals partnered with uninfected
individuals (serodiscordant couples) reduced HIV transmission by 96 percent.
In two years of
follow-up analysis of 1,761 HIV-infected study participants, researchers
compared those who delayed antiretroviral treatment until their CD4+ T-cell
counts were an average of 230 cells/ per cubic millimeter with those who began
antiretroviral treatment sooner.
The delayed group
experienced a shorter time to a primary clinical event, including AIDS-defining
disease and all types of tuberculosis. In total, there were 91 primary clinical
events in the delayed treatment group versus 71 in the immediate group.
This included 71
cases of AIDS-defining disease in the delayed treatment group versus 49 in the
immediate group, and 34 cases of tuberculosis in the delayed group versus 17 in
the immediate group.
The trial provides
evidence that earlier antiretroviral treatment among the HIV-infected provides
significant health benefits.
In a separate
modelling analysis designed to predict the clinical impact, costs and
cost-effectiveness of the earlier antiretroviral treatment strategy,
researchers compared the delayed treatment versus earlier treatment data in
South Africa and India.
The two countries
were selected to show how regional economic differences may or may not affect
the conclusions. The researchers designated earlier treatment to be "very
cost effective" if its cost-effectiveness ratio was less than one times
per capita gross domestic product (GDP).
Earlier treatment
was deemed "cost effective" if its cost-effectiveness ratio was less
than three times per capita GDP. The GDP was set at 8,100 dollars for South
Africa and 1,400 dollars for India.
Using this model,
they found that in both South Africa and India early ART increases patient
survival, prevents costly opportunistic infections-partially offsetting the
costs of treatment-averts HIV transmission, and is cost-effective within a
five-year span and very cost-effective over a lifetime.
The findings of the
two analyses were presented at the XIX International AIDS Conference (AIDS
2012) in Washington, D.C.
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