The World
Health Organiation (WHO) has warned that the spread of an HIV strain resistant
to some of the most widely used medicines could undermine global progress
in
treating and preventing HIV infection if early and effective action is not
taken.
The
Director-General of WHO, Tedros Ghebreyesus, stated this in the “WHO HIV Drug
Resistance Report 2017”.
“Antimicrobial
drug resistance is a growing challenge to global health and sustainable
development.
“We need to
proactively address the rising levels of resistance to HIV drugs if we are to
achieve the global target of ending AIDS by 2030,” he said.
According to
him, in six of the 11 countries surveyed in Africa, Asia and Latin America,
more than 10 per cent of people starting antiretroviral therapy had a strain
that was resistant to some of the most widely used medicines.
Once the
threshold of 10 per cent has been reached, WHO recommends those countries to
urgently review their HIV treatment programmes.
HIV drug
resistance develops when people do not adhere to a prescribed treatment plan,
WHO warned.
The UN
health agency further warned that those with drug resistance would start to
fail therapy and may also transmit drug-resistant viruses to others.
Of the 36.7
million people living with HIV worldwide, 19.5 million people were accessing
antiretroviral therapy as at 2016, it said.
It added
that the majority of these people were doing well, but that the number of those
experiencing the consequences of drug resistance was growing.
WHO further
warned that “increasing HIV drug resistance trends could lead to more
infections and deaths.
“Mathematical
modeling shows an additional 135,000 deaths and 105,000 new infections could
follow in the next five years if no action is taken, and HIV treatment costs
could increase by an additional 650 million dollars during this time”.
According to
Gottfried Hirnschall, Director of WHO’s HIV Department and Global Hepatitis
Programme, “WHO is therefore issuing new guidelines to help countries address
HIV drug resistance”.
“When levels
of HIV drug resistance become high, we recommend that countries shift to an
alternative first-line therapy for those who are starting treatment,” Hirnschall
warned.
(NAN)
0 Comments