SA: Government urged to raise
treatment standards
Plusnews
Published in HIV/AIDS News by LearnScapes, issue 296
06/05/2008
Johannesburg – HIV/AIDS treatment guidelines for
South Africa's public health sector are out of sync not
only with those of many other countries in the region, but
also with the latest research on how to most effectively
treat people living with HIV.
Various studies indicating that patients who start antiretroviral
therapy (ART) earlier respond better to treatment and are
less likely to develop AIDS-related illnesses have led the
United States, the United Kingdom and a number of countries
in Africa to change their treatment protocols. Deciding
when to start a patient on life-long ARV drugs is usually
based on a combination of CD4 cell count test results [which
indicate the strength of the immune system] and HIV disease
progression, which the World Health Organisation (WHO) has
defined according to four clinical stages, with stage four
being AIDS. The WHO revised its guidelines in 2003 to recommend
that a patient who has reached stage three of the disease
and has a CD4 count of less than 350 should begin treatment.
Most countries in the region have revised their guidelines
accordingly, but South Africa's national ART guidelines
are still based on earlier WHO recommendations that ART
be prescribed only for patients with stage four disease,
or a CD4 count of less than 200. In April, the Southern
African HIV Clinicians Society published guidelines in the
Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine recommending that
people living with HIV begin ART when their CD4 cell count
drops below 350, regardless of disease
progression. These guidelines are endorsed by the region's
leading HIV specialists but have no direct influence on
the South African government's ART programme.
"We've strongly recommended [starting treatment at
a CD4 count of] 350, and we'd like the Department of Health
to consider it," said Dr Francois Venter, director
of the Society. "It's such an easy disease to treat
when you treat it early; the complication rate is so much
less." The Society's new guidelines also recommend
dropping stavudine, a first-line ARV drug, from public sector
treatment programmes because of its high toxicity and sometimes
severe side effects, and suggest tenofovir as a possible
alternative first-line drug.
Yet a recent ARV drug tender issued by the health department
was still listing stavudine as a first-line drug, and listed
tenofovir, which is more expensive, only as a second-line
ARV drug. The Society's recommendation that all pregnant
HIV-positive women receive ART, regardless of their CD4
count, also contradicts guidelines for the prevention of
mother-to-child HIV transmission issued by South Africa's
health department in February 2008, stating that only pregnant
women with a CD4 count of less than 200 should receive ART.
According to Venter, the health department is in the process
of drafting revised treatment guidelines, but a department
spokesperson was unable to confirm this or provide details.
Revising the government guidelines to start patients on
ARVs earlier would not have a major impact on the health
department's budget or capacity, said Venter, considering
most patients presented for treatment quite late. "There's
no real waiting list in most places, but my sense is that
by penalising the whole system we're never going to be on
top of things."
Some experts have argued that starting patients on ART
earlier could actually save the government money in the
long term by reducing the need to treat them for opportunistic
infections such as tuberculosis (TB). Prof Robin Wood, director
of the Desmond Tutu HIV Centre at the University of Cape
Town, is among the clinicians who have been calling for
the South African government to raise the standard of treatment
set out in its guidelines. However, he pointed out that
better guidelines would be meaningless without improving
the quality of care and access to services. According to
Wood, the median CD4 count at which South Africans actually
access ART is about 100. "People tend to just get the
[HIV] test and then are left outside the health system until
they get TB, or get pregnant, or get sick," he told
IRIN/PlusNews. "At the moment, it's more acute disease
management than chronic care. Within that system it's very
difficult for people to go and demand CD4 counts when they're
not really aware of the benefits of them."
In the absence of a health system that regularly monitors
HIV-infected patients, changing the guidelines was "a
bit theoretical", said Wood. "Personally, I'd
like to change the CD4 count to 350, but I'm not naive enough
to think it's going to make a difference to morbidity without
major changes to our health systems."
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