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People with HIV who are given free ART drugs do "significantly" better
Jul 31, 2005, 13:51
Doucette said she was not surprised with the results, except for the fact that people in developing countries who received free ART drugs did so much better--30 per cent higher rates of success--than people who had to pay for their drugs. |
A
new study from the University of Alberta reveals that people with HIV in developing
countries do just as well on antiretroviral therapy (ART) programs as do people
with HIV on ART programs in developed countries. It also shows that people
with HIV who are given free ART drugs will do "significantly" better at fighting
the disease compared to those who must pay for the drugs.
"ART programs are complex therapeutic regimens that require patients to take
a minimum of three pills a day for the rest of their lives," said Dr. Karen
Doucette, a professor in the U of A Division of Infectious Diseases. "It's
often difficult for people in North America to maintain the regimens, so some
critics believe these programs can't work in resource poor settings, where
patients don't have the support--the pharmacists, the social workers, and
the physicians, for example--that we have."
However, after reviewing more than 100 research papers on the topic, Doucette
and her colleagues concluded ART programs have the same efficacy rates in
both developed and non-developed countries. The general success rate in keeping
the virus suppressed after being on the program for 12 to 18 months is about
60 per cent. The results are published this month in the journal Clinical
Infectious Diseases.
Doucette said she was not surprised with the results, except for the fact
that people in developing countries who received free ART drugs did so much
better--30 per cent higher rates of success--than people who had to pay for
their drugs.
"Although this intuitively makes sense, it was a satisfying surprise to be
able to demonstrate the impact of payment for ART on its success. This has
important potential implications for ART program development, which is ongoing
in many resource-poor settings around the world," Doucette said.
According to the latest numbers from the UN, about 40 million people currently
have HIV. The vast majority of these people live in developing countries,
with almost 75 per cent living in Sub-Saharan Africa. The UN's goal is to
provide at least 3 million people living with HIV/AIDS in low- and middle-income
countries with ART by the end of 2005.
The number of people receiving ART has been increasing in every region in
the world, with Sub-Saharan Africa doubling the number of people on ART to
500,000 in the past six months. As of June 2005, about 1 million people are
on ART. Doucette believes these recent results are encouraging, but she says
there must be ongoing political, financial and technical support to keep the
trend going.
"Our study shows that there's no reason why people in Africa and other resource-poor
settings won't follow ART regimens if they can access the treatments. We just
have to make sure that everyone knows this and the support for these programs
are strengthened over time," Doucette said.