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OPINION
WHEN TO START ANTIRETROVIRAL
THERAPY IN ADULTS: THE RESULTS OF
HPTN 052 MOVE US CLOSER TO A
‘TEST-AND-TREAT’ POLICY
Nathan Geffen, MSc
Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town
When is the best time to initiate antiretroviral therapy (ART) in
adults? This is a vital question in HIV treatment and prevention
services. More specifically, is the 350 cells/µl CD4 count
threshold recommended by current World Health Organization (WHO)
guidelines sufficient, or should we move to a
‘test-and-treat’ approach in which anyone who tests
HIV-positive is offered ART, irrespective of their CD4 count? The
recently announced results of the HPTN 052 trial take us closer, but
not all the way, to a test-and-treat approach.
There are several important questions in determining ART initiation
criteria, including what is best for treating the HIV-positive
individual, what is best for HIV and tuberculosis (TB) prevention at
the population level, and the costs of the different options for
initiating ART. While there is not yet enough evidence to confidently
change policy to recommend universal ART for all HIV-positive
individuals, there are certainly enough data to support the
implementation and evaluation of ‘test-and-treat’ pilot
programmes.
WHAT IS BEST FOR TREATING THE HIV-POSITIVE INDIVIDUAL?
Clinical trials have shown definitively that a CD4 threshold of 350
cells/µl for initiating ART results in lower morbidity and
mortality than 200 cells/µl.1
,
2 However, observational data on whether patients with HIV will benefit from initiating at a higher CD4 count are less clear.
Researchers from the North American NA-ACCORD cohort (including over
17 500 patients) found a nearly two times increased risk of death in
patients who deferred ART to below 500 cells/µl.3
This study is cited in US treatment guidelines that provide for early
treatment. However, the study’s statistical methods have been
criticised.4
,
5 Other evidence comes from the HIV-CAUSAL collaboration, which includes nearly
21 000 patients in Europe and America, including the NA-ACCORD
patients. In this study no mortality benefit was observed for patients
who started ART with a CD4 count above 500 cells/µl compared with
those who started at 350 cells/µl. However, AIDS-defining
illnesses were significantly more likely among patients who started
treatment at lower CD4 counts.6
These studies do not offer conclusive evidence that initiating ART
early (>500 cells/µl) will benefit patients. Both NA-ACCORD
and HIV-
CAUSAL are observational studies and subject to methodological
limitations. The long-term side-effects of ART and the possible effect
of treatment fatigue on adherence might mitigate against early
initiation. Furthermore, participants in these studies were less likely
to use sub-optimal drugs, such as stavudine, that are prevalent in many
resource-limited settings.
It is hoped that two ongoing clinical trials will answer once and
for all whether early treatment is beneficial. The Strategic Timing of
Antiretroviral Treatment (START) trial is recruiting 4 000 volunteers.
Patients with CD4 counts >500 cells/µl are randomised to
either initiate immediately or defer to 350 cells/µl.7
This international trial currently only has one site in sub-Saharan
Africa, the Desmond Tutu HIV Centre at the University of Cape Town
(UCT). START is due to complete in 2015, and clinicians in Cape Town
should encourage their patients with high CD4 counts to consider
enrolling at the UCT site.
In addition, the ANRS 12136 trial in Côte d’Ivoire is
due to complete in 2013. The trial objective is to compare the benefits
and risks of initiating ART according to the WHO guidelines versus the
benefits and risks of initiating ART immediately among HIV-positive
adults with CD4 counts >350 cells/µl.8
WHAT IS BEST FOR HIV AND TB PREVENTION AT THE POPULATION LEVEL?
Several observational studies show that there is a strong
correlation between reduced HIV incidence and either increased ART
coverage or lower viral loads in the community. In San Francisco, new
HIV diagnoses decreased along with mean community viral load from 2004
to 2008.9
In Taiwan, there was a more than 50% decrease in HIV infections
ascertained by community surveillance after the introduction of free
ART.10 In
British Columbia from 1996 to 2009, the number of people receiving ART
increased from 837 to 5 413, while the number of new HIV diagnoses fell
over 50% from 702 to 338 per year.11
Because of the possibility of confounding factors, these
observational studies alone do not prove a causal effect, although they
are strongly suggestive. This research was also conducted in
populations where a large proportion of HIV-positive individuals are
men who have sex with men (MSM), and the generalisability of the
findings to heterosexual populations may be questioned. However, the
recently terminated HPTN 052 study indeed demonstrates that ART reduces
the risk of HIV transmission in serodiscordant predominantly
heterosexual couples.
HPTN 052 was an international study that began enrolling in 2005. A
total of 1 763 HIV-positive people in serodiscordant relationships and
with CD4 counts from 350 to 550 cells/µl were randomised to
either receive ART immediately (immediate group) or when their CD4
count fell below 250 cells/µl (delayed group). A total of 39 HIV
infections
occurred, and genetic analysis demonstrated that most transmission was
between partners enrolled in the trial. Only one HIV transmission took
place from HIV-positive to HIV-negative partner in the immediate group
versus 27 in the delayed group (hazard ratio (HR) 0.04; 95% confidence
interval (CI) 0.01 - 0.27; p<0.001).12
The study was due to complete in April 2015, but the Data Safety
Monitoring Board terminated it in May 2011 because of the highly
significant results.
An additional important finding from HPTN 052 is that patients in
the immediate initiation arm had fewer treatment endpoints, defined as
first serious HIV-related clinical event or death (HR 0.59; 95% CI 0.40
- 0.88; p=0.01). The difference was
driven by the fact that three participants in the immediate arm versus
17 in the delayed arm developed extrapulmonary TB (p=0.002).
However, given the wide CI and the fact that the treatment initiation
threshold was 250 cells/µl (not 350 cells/µl), this is not
conclusive evidence of the benefit of early treatment to the patient.
Existing research suggests that a test-and-treat approach is likely
to reduce HIV incidence. It is of course not a panacea: test-and-treat
will seldom identify patients with primary HIV infection and therefore
will not eliminate transmissions during primary HIV infection.
Infections due to virological failure should also be expected, and
there is the inevitable decline in efficacy when moving from trial
conditions to programmes serving entire populations. Nevertheless,
combined with scaled-up male medical circumcisions and condom
distribution, we now have a formidable arsenal for reducing sexually
transmitted HIV infections.
A further public health benefit of test-and-treat is the effect on
the TB epidemic. Observational data also show a correlation between ART
scale-up and reduced TB incidence. For example, one study in
Masiphumelele township in Cape Town found that pre-ART adult TB
notifications increased by an average of 212 cases per 100 000 people
per year, while post-HAART, adult cases decreased by 116 per 100 000
per year.13
,
14
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR GUIDELINES?
While ‘test-and-treat’ policies might still be a few
years away, it is perplexing that the South African treatment
guidelines still use an ART initiation threshold of 200 cells/µl
except for pregnant women and people with TB (in which case 350
cells/µl is the initiation threshold). This is not a minor issue.
A study by Médecins Sans Frontières of a Lesotho cohort
found that the 639 patients who initiated above 200 cells/µl were
68% less likely to die and 39% less likely to be lost to follow-up than
patients who initiated below 200 cells/µl. Only 56 patients were
pregnant and 66 had TB, and thus would have been started on treatment
according to the South African guidelines.15
By failing to update our guidelines to the WHO standard, i.e. offering
ART to all patients at first CD4 count below 350 cells/µl, we are
probably losing lives.*
WHAT ABOUT COSTS?
Costing and operational issues are major concerns in implementing a
‘test-and-treat’ strategy on a large scale. One analysis
presented at the International AIDS Conference in 2010 estimates the
cost of using ART for prevention in South Africa. This analysis
concluded that expanding ART to all CD4 levels, beyond the recommended
WHO threshold of 350 cells/µl, would add $700 million to the cost
of the programme, but that this would prevent 681 000 new infections
over time, and consequently allow the cost of the programme to break
even by 2022.16
Another analysis by the Health Economics and Epidemiology Research
Office (HERO) has examined the cost of ART using the WHO guidelines
compared with a CD4 initiation of 200 cells/µl (South
Africa’s old guidelines). The cost of first-line tenofovir-based
regimens is estimated to be R4 320 per patient for the first 6 months
of treatment followed by R6 126 per patient per year.17 The ASSA2008 model estimates that there are 5.6 million people with HIV and 1.2 million on treatment.18 If
hypothetically it were possible to initiate 1 million people on ART
with CD4 counts >350 cells/µl who pass through the HCT
programme over the next year as part of a test-and-treat programme at
an average of
R7 000 per patient for the first year, the additional cost of ART would
be R7 billion – a substantial burden on the state’s
finances. However there are also potential cost savings due to reduced
HIV infections and possibly reduced opportunistic infections. The
potential of reducing the cost of treatment by lowering ART prices,
task-shifting, and the potential for the private sector to absorb a
greater part of the cost of treatment than it currently does should
also be considered.
The HERO study suggests that if task-shifting were implemented and
optimal reference prices were paid for ART regimens, the WHO 350
cells/µl initiation threshold including tenofovir-based regimens
would cost less to implement than using the old 200 cells/µl
threshold with stavudine (without task-shifting and optimal reference
prices). Analyses like this demonstrate that it is not necessarily
guideline improvements that stand in the way of making programmes more
affordable, but rather sub-optimal drug prices and programme
design and staffing plans. In this light, it is possible that
‘test-and-treat’ approaches could be made highly
cost-effective, and analyses of the costs and benefits of such an
approach are clearly needed.
CONCLUSION
While we do not yet have sufficient data to change guidelines to
adopt test-and-treat, there are sufficient data to support preliminary
programmes to research this approach. The HPTN 052 results suggest that
‘test-and-treat’ may present an opportunity to reduce HIV
incidence in South Africa. Nationally, we need to consider piloting in
some health facilities the offer of ART to HIV-positive people in
serodiscordant relationships, heterosexual or homosexual, irrespective
of CD4 count. Such an operational research cohort would help us
estimate the cost of a test-and-treat approach and identify its
practical challenges and opportunities.
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*This policy was changed
after this article was accepted. Now all HIV-positive patients with CD4
counts <350 cells/ µl are eligible for ART. – Editor
Declaration of conflict of interests: The author is on the Community Advisory Board for the START study.