Round Table

Community-based treatment of advanced HIV disease: introducing DOT-HAART (directly observed therapy with highly active antiretroviral therapy)

Paul Farmer,1 Fernet Léandre,2 Joia Mukherjee,3 Rajesh Gupta,4 Laura Tarter,5 & Jim Yong Kim6

 

 


Abstract In 2000, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) overtook tuberculosis (TB) as the world's leading infectious cause of adult deaths. In affluent countries, however, AIDS mortality has dropped sharply, largely because of the use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Antiretroviral agents are not yet considered essential medications by international public health experts and are not widely used in the poor countries where human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) takes its greatest toll. Arguments against the use of HAART have mainly been based on the high cost of medications and the lack of the infrastructure necessary for using them wisely. We re- examine these arguments in the setting of rising AIDS mortality in developing countries and falling drug prices, and describe a small community-based treatment programme based on lessons gained in TB control. With the collaboration of Haitian community health workers experienced in the delivery of home-based and directly observed treatment for TB, an AIDS-prevention project was expanded to deliver HAART to a subset of HIV patients deemed most likely to benefit. The inclusion criteria and preliminary results are presented. We conclude that directly observed therapy (DOT) with HAART, "DOT-HAART", can be delivered effectively in poor settings if there is an uninterrupted supply of high-quality drugs.

Keywords HIV infections/drug therapy; Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome/drug therapy; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-resistant/drug therapy; Highly active antiretroviral therapy/economics; Drug costs; Community health services; Poverty; Haiti (source: MeSH).

Mots clés HIV, Infection/chimiothérapie; SIDA/chimiothérapie; Tuberculose résistante à la polychimiothérapie/chimiothérapie; Thérapie antirétrovirale hautement active/économie; Coût médicament; Service public santé; Pauvreté; Haïti (source: INSERM).

Palabras clave Infecciones por VIH/quimioterapia; Síndrome de inmunodeficiencia adquirida/quimioterapia; Tuberculosis resistente a multidrogas/quimioterapia; Terapia antirretroviral altamente activa/economía; Costos en drogas; Servicios de salud comunitaria; Pobreza; Haití (fuente: BIREME).


 

 

Introduction

A comprehensive and equitable strategy is needed to stem the worsening burden of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in poor countries (1–3). Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), once easier to construe as a national security threat than a public health emergency (4), is increasingly seen as the public health crisis it is (5, 6). The AIDS epidemic has overwhelmed the fragile health systems of the poorest and most heavily burdened countries, altering the distribution and outcome of other diseases, including tuberculosis (TB), cervical cancer, and pneumococcal pneumonia (7–10). Furthermore, the concurrent breakdown of civil society, including family structures, agricultural and industrial production, and education and medical services, has been reported across the African continent (11–13).

Although clade variation may play a role, the chief factors favouring the rapid spread of HIV are social in nature (14), namely poverty (15–17), violence (18, 19) and gender inequality (20, 21). Similar factors account for a lack of access to medical care, resulting in untreated sexually transmitted diseases (22), unchecked mother-to-child HIV transmission (23), and lack of treatment of AIDS- related illnesses. Preventive activities, based largely on education and the promotion of the male condom, do not confront these social factors.

The potential efficacy of preventive programmes has been widely discussed by advocates (24, 25), yet prevention has not proved very effective in the regions where HIV is taking its greatest toll (26, 27). Indeed, it was recently acknowledged that such programmes have never been subjected to rigorous clinical trials (28). More than 36 million people are infected with HIV; for them, primary prevention has clearly failed. In contrast, the advent of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has reduced AIDS mortality significantly in North America and Europe. The use of antiretrovirals in the USA has decreased AIDS-related morbidity and mortality by up to 90% and has significantly affected the trajectory of the epidemic (29). Yet in sub-Saharan Africa and the poorest parts of Latin America the resources made available by public health systems or donor agencies have been dedicated solely to HIV prevention (30).

In the arena of public health, the supposed conflict between prevention and treatment has dominated recent discussion about AIDS. It has been argued that, in a setting of limited resources, either prevention or treatment must be prioritized (31). Policy debates about AIDS are also marked by disputes about resource allocation: between development, the vaccination of children, or the treatment of TB on the one hand and the treatment of AIDS on the other. Perhaps the two most significant objections to treating HIV disease with HAART are the high cost of antiretroviral medications and the lack of an infrastructure capable of delivering the therapy in poor countries. As financial barriers have fallen (Fig. 1), the response to a potential increase in access has added more objections to the treatment of AIDS with HAART, including those of unfeasibility and patients' non-compliance (33). The spectre of acquired drug resistance is also frequently raised, although this has not yet been reported in the developing world. The concern has also been raised that the use of antiretrovirals might hamper preventive efforts if people lost their fear of becoming infected (34).

 

 

Certain of these objections to treatment may be cast in doubt by our experience in rural Haiti, where there are both high rates of HIV infection and a poor health infrastructure. More significantly, in terms of experience to date, are lessons learned in treating another chronic infectious disease, tuberculosis. Indeed, the epidemiology of the two diseases is increasingly enmeshed as HIV spreads rapidly in the regions where TB is endemic (35), such as Haiti. In Haiti, the only Latin American country in which life expectancy has declined over the past decade (36), HIV is probably the leading infectious cause of mortality among young adults. Surveys in poor urban regions of Haiti demonstrate a national HIV prevalence of 5%; a figure of up to 13% has been reported for women presenting to prenatal clinics (37).

 

Lessons from TB control

The history of TB control offers many lessons to those committed to responding more effectively to the HIV epidemic (38). Like HIV, TB requires multidrug therapy over an extended period. Consequently, treatment adherence and drug resistance are critical programme issues. Direct observation of therapy (DOT) has assisted in increasing TB cure rates and lowering drug resistance in a wide range of settings. The lessons are particularly significant in rural Haiti, where TB remains endemic and a major cause of morbidity and mortality. During the previous decade, more than half the patients we diagnosed with HIV presented with pulmonary or extrapulmonary TB (Fig. 2). Many HIV-positive patients therefore became known to us as TB patients and were offered daily DOT by community health workers, called accompagnateurs (Fig. 3), because they "accompany" patients on a daily basis. The accompagnateurs ensure that DOT-HAART is effectively monitored once it is intiated.

 

 

 

 

The HIV Equity Initiative

Between 1998 and 2000 we launched the "HIV Equity Initiative" in order to deliver antiretroviral therapy to some of the western hemisphere's poorest AIDS patients (40). Over the past decade, Partners in Health and local collaborators in Haiti have attempted to establish a comprehensive AIDS programme to serve a small region of central Haiti. It includes access to free voluntary testing and counselling, the provision of AZT (zidovudine) for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission, and aggressive diagnosis and treatment of opportunistic infections, including TB. The chief AIDS prevention activities have consisted of community education and the development of culturally appropriate preventive tools. Despite these efforts, HIV transmission has continued in rural Haiti. Furthermore, HIV acquired in urban areas, where its prevalence has always been higher, was diagnosed in rural areas when sick young adults returned to die in the villages where they had been born. Local preventive efforts have no impact on transmission events occurring far away (41).

Over the past few years a team based at the Clinique Bon Sauveur in central Haiti has developed a set of algorithms that could identify, initially without the help of CD4+ T-cell counts or viral load testing, those patients most likely to need life-sustaining treatment with HAART (Box 1). These guidelines include a series of enrolment criteria reflecting local epidemiology. In countries where TB is endemic, such as Haiti, the disease usually results from an infection acquired in childhood (42). As such, HIV- associated TB is often a reactivation disease, rather than being attributable to progressive primary infection, and occurs early in the course of HIV infection.

 

 

Our patients with HIV-associated TB respond well to antituberculous therapy alone. Their HIV disease often remains asymptomatic without HAART for years after the completion of TB treatment. Of 246 patients diagnosed with TB in 1994, 38 were diagnosed with HIV coinfection. Of these, 36 responded to directly observed treatment, short-course (DOTS) chemotherapy for TB. Six years later, follow-up was possible for 29 of these patients: 27 were still alive, two had died. Of the 27 patients with a known diagnosis of HIV for six years or more, two initiated DOT-HAART in 1999, one in 2000, and two in 2001. The other 22 are outpatients and remain stable without antiretroviral therapy.

In contrast, patients who present to the Clinique Bon Sauveur with wasting disease, chronic enteropathies, neurological complications of HIV disease, severe anaemia, or severe leukopenia are believed more likely to have significant immunodeficiency and a more urgent need to start HAART. Of over 1350 HIV-positive patients diagnosed and followed at the clinic it was estimated that between 120 and 150 would benefit from the immediate introduction of antiretroviral therapy. Most of these patients are now receiving DOT-HAART.

Consequences of the DOT-HAART project

The introduction of DOT-HAART had both intended and unforeseen consequences (Box 2). The clinical response to therapy was favourable in 59 of the first 60 patients (over 40 more were enrolled in 2001). We estimate that 48 of these patients were able to resume working and caring for their children. The weights of all but two patients increased by more than 2 kg within the first 3 months of therapy. In a subset of 21 DOT-HAART patients whose viral loads were tested, 18 (86%) had no detectable virus in peripheral blood. This suggests that therapy was quite effective. Most studies based in the USA demonstrate viral suppression in only about 50% of patients after one year of treatment (43).

 

 

Emotional problems have been reported among health care workers in areas where AIDS is endemic but therapy is unavailable (44). The provision of life-saving care through the HIV Equity Initiative has had a favourable impact on staff morale. It is our belief that the stigma associated with AIDS has diminished as a result of dramatic responses to therapy. Decreased stigma is reflected in an increased willingness of patients to discuss their diagnosis openly, an increased demand for HIV testing, and a reduced number of patients' complaints regarding abusive behaviour of family members or neighbours. A related consequence of introducing DOT- HAART is an increased use of the clinic's free HIV testing and counselling services. HIV testing has been available since 1988 but during the past two years its utilization has increased by more than 300%. Thus the provision of AIDS treatment has strengthened AIDS prevention.

The success of this small demonstration project as one of the few attempts to provide DOT-HAART in a resource-limited setting led us to propose a "basic minimum package" for AIDS prevention and care (Box 3). Because this far exceeds what exists in Haiti, Africa, and Asia, concerns have been raised about replicability in other low-income settings. Indeed, our own attempts to obtain funding were often met with resistance on the grounds that the project would be unsustainable in a country as poor as Haiti. The chief barrier has been the high costs of antiretroviral agents.

 

 

Drug costs

We estimate that 75–80% of project expenditures have been for medications. Although price estimates vary widely, in the established market economies most regimens cost more than US$ 10 000 per year per person (45). Nevertheless, HAART has been judged cost-effective not only in the USA, largely because of a reduction in hospitalizations, but also in Brazil (46, 47). At such prices, however, the implementation of HAART in a poor country, even with the DOT-HAART approach to assure compliance, is considered in international medical and public health circles as neither sustainable nor cost- effective.

High drug costs in the face of the devastation caused by AIDS have induced vigorous debate on the use of generic as opposed to brand-name drugs. The introduction of generic drugs has coincided with a steep fall in the price of antiretrovirals (Table 1 and Fig. 4). The question arises as to whether public health emergencies should be confronted by novel strategies attempting to deal with the underlying inequities of the global economy. The market itself will not suffice in responding to the health problems of the poor. The treatment of onchocerciasis with ivermectin is a commonly cited example of an alternative or complementary strategy, as this drug is made available free of charge by a major pharmaceutical company. However, onchocerciasis is treated with a single drug. Examples of effective responses to complex infectious diseases requiring long-term treatment with multidrug regimens are scarce, but TB offers instructive examples. Precisely the same market logic was once applied to rifampicin, now the mainstay of short-course chemotherapy in resource- poor settings. In 1973 the suggestion was made that rifampicin was unlikely to prove useful in developing countries because of its cost (49). Similarly, until recently, multidrug-resistant TB was considered untreatable in resource-poor settings because drug costs alone could exceed US$ 10 000 per patient per year. As with the treatment of HIV disease, most of the cost of multidrug-resistant TB treatment was attributable to drug costs.

 

 

 

 

However, local demand does not disappear merely because international policies decree that treatment is unsustainable. Demand follows the epidemiology of disease and its wake of human suffering. When multidrug-resistant TB was recognized as a growing problem, treatment advocates sought examples of centrally coordinated drug procurement that might reduce prices and allow the proper use of medications. One such example is WHO's International Coordinating Group for meningococcal vaccine, which was formed to streamline the distribution of vaccine to poor countries in Africa's "meningococcal belt". This helped to move low-cost vaccine purchased by WHO to epidemics when local health authorities demonstrated the capacity to use the vaccine correctly.

A coalition of nongovernmental organizations, WHO, and national governments formed the "Green Light Committee" for access to drugs for multidrug- resistant TB. Using a model based on the pooled procurement of vaccines for meningitis control, pooled purchasing and capacity assessment were adopted to make second-line antituberculous drugs available to countries and programmes needing them. Through negotiations with the research-based and generic pharmaceutical industries, the cost of drugs for multidrug-resistant TB was reduced by up to 98%. Furthermore, the Green Light Committee has established a system that both evaluates and provides technical assistance to projects seeking access to drugs for multidrug-resistant TB. Access is improved at the same time as rational use is promoted (50). It should be noted that this process was delayed until a commitment was made by both the scientific and public health communities to provide free treatment for patients with multidrug-resistant TB.

 

Conclusions

The rapid spread of HIV demands a comprehensive global AIDS strategy that includes prevention, testing, and counselling, the treatment of opportunistic infections, and the use of HAART. Social assistance to families and communities affected by HIV is also critical. For most of the hardest hit communities, AIDS is the latest in a long line of health threats. The greatest of these are poverty and inequality, both of which are co-factors for and consequences of HIV transmission. If HIV reveals a lack of basic primary care services for the poor, an aggressive response to this comparatively new disease may help to solve a host of old problems. High drug costs and the need for sustained monitoring have led many observers to conclude that aggressive treatment of chronic disease is neither feasible nor sustainable in those communities where the demand for treatment is greatest. The result is a growing "outcome gap" between rich and poor even as diseases become treatable by means of new medical technologies among people who have access to them (51).

Successful DOTS programmes for TB are a reminder that chronic infectious diseases can be treated effectively in the poorest of settings, even though treatment regimens contain several antibiotics. The demand for HAART can be expected to grow as the burden of HIV disease grows. The rapid fall in drug prices can be expected to lead to the introduction of drugs into settings with poor health infrastructures. Incorrect or inconsistent use of these drugs will result in the emergence of HIV strains that are resistant to them. However, the use of some of the strategies outlined above — namely DOT- HAART, a centralized Green Light Committee for the procurement and distribution of drugs, and technical assistance as appropriate — might make it possible to enhance both access to antiretroviral agents and the rational use of the drugs within a given health infrastructure. Moreover, experience in central Haiti demonstrates that it is possible to incorporate work on AIDS treatment into established prevention efforts, and indeed to fortify prevention efforts where they are most needed.

If the response to HIV matched the gravity and dimensions of the problem it causes, resources could be expected to flow to both afflicted communities and the scientific establishment so that better diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines could be developed. Until this happens, a basic minimum package is required which focuses on both prevention and the treatment of people already living with HIV disease. The DOT-HAART project described above is so small that it would not merit attention in the public health literature if we could point to larger and better studies that respond aggressively to the growing challenge of HIV. Because we cannot, we hope that our experience might be instructive in other settings where HIV and poverty are the top-ranking threats to health.

 

Acknowledgements

The treatment of patients in Zanmi Lasante's HIV Equity Initiative is made possible by the accompagnateurs who deliver therapy and through the generosity of Partners in Health supporters. We thank especially Thomas J. White, the Open Society Institute, the Brigham and Women's Hospital, Bruce Walker and the Partners AIDS Research Center, and the Charlotte Taylor Foundation.

Conflicts of interest: none declared.

 

 


Résumé

Traitement communautaire des stades avancés de l'infection à VIH : introduction du DOT- HAART (traitement antirétroviral hautement actif sous surveillance directe)

En 2000, le syndrome d'immunodéficience acquise (SIDA) l'a emporté sur la tuberculose en tant que principale cause infectieuse de décès chez l'adulte à l'échelle mondiale. Dans les pays riches, la mortalité par SIDA a toutefois fortement baissé grâce aux thérapies antirétrovirales hautement actives (HAART). Les antirétroviraux ne sont pas encore considérés comme médicaments essentiels par les experts internationaux de santé publique et sont peu utilisés dans les pays pauvres, où le virus de l'immunodéficience humaine (VIH) fait le plus de victimes. Les arguments contre l'utilisation de ces médicaments reposent essentiellement sur leur coût élevé et sur l'absence des infrastructures nécessaires à une utilisation judicieuse. Nous réexaminons ici ces arguments dans le contexte de l'augmentation de la mortalité par SIDA dans les pays en développement et de la baisse considérable des prix des médicaments, et décrivons un programme à petite échelle de traitement communautaire utilisant les acquis de la lutte contre la tuberculose. Avec la collaboration d'agents de santé communautaires haïtiens expérimens dans la délivrance du traitement à domicile sous surveillance directe pour la lutte contre la tuberculose, un projet de prévention du SIDA a été étendu à la délivrance de HAART à un sous-groupe de patients infectés par le VIH et jugés les plus susceptibles d'en tirer profit. Les critères d'inclusion dans l'étude et les résultats préliminaires sont présentés ici. Nous concluons que le traitement sous surveillance directe (DOT) par des antirétroviraux hautement actifs (HAART), le " DOT- HAART ", peut être délivré efficacement en milieu pauvre sous réserve d'un approvisionnement continu en médicaments de bonne qualité.


Resumen

Tratamiento comunitario de la infección avanzada por el VIH: introducción del tratamiento DOT-HAART (tratamiento bajo observación directa con antirretrovíricos de gran potencia)

En 2000, el síndrome de inmunodeficiencia adquirida (SIDA) superó a la tuberculosis como principal causa infecciosa de defunciones de adultos a nivel mundial. En los países prósperos, sin embargo, la mortalidad por SIDA ha caído pronunciadamente, en gran parte gracias a la terapia con antirretrovíricos de gran potencia (HAART). Los antirretrovíricos todavía no son considerados medicamentos esenciales por los expertos internacionales en salud pública, y tampoco han empezado a ser ampliamente utilizados en los países pobres donde el virus de la inmunodeficiencia humana (VIH) se cobra más vidas. Como argumentos contra el uso de los HAART se han esgrimido fundamentalmente el elevado costo de esos medicamentos y la falta de la infraestructura necesaria para usarlos correctamente. En este artículo reanalizamos esos argumentos a la luz del aumento de la mortalidad por SIDA registrado en los países en desarrollo y de la caída de los precios de los medicamentos, y describimos un pequeño programa de tratamiento comunitario basado en las lecciones extraídas de la lucha contra la tuberculosis. Con la colaboración de agentes de salud comunitarios de Haití experimentados en la administración domiciliaria de tratamiento antituberculoso bajo observación directa, se procedió a ampliar un proyecto de prevención del SIDA para que incluyese la administración de HAART a un subgrupo de pacientes infectados por el VIH que se consideró que podrían ser los más beneficiados. Se presentan los criterios de inclusión y los resultados preliminares. Nuestra conclusión es que, si se garantiza el suministro ininterrumpido de medicamentos de alta calidad, la terapia bajo observación directa (DOT) con HAART, "DOT-HAART", se puede aplicar eficazmente en entornos pobres.


 

 

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1 Professor, Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; and Medical Director, Zanmi Lasante, Cange, Haiti. Correspondence should be addressed to this author at the Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, 641 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02155, USA (email: PIHPaul@aol.com).

2 Medical Director, Thomas J. White Center, Zanmi Lasante, Cange, Haiti.

3 Medical Director, Partners in Health, Boston, MA, USA, and Instructor, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

4 Lecturer, Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

5 Research Assistant, Partners in Health and Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

6 Director, Program in Infectious Disease and Social Change, Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

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