| Literature DB >> 27600800 |
Anthony D Harries1,2,3, Nathan Ford4, Andreas Jahn5,6, Erik J Schouten7, Edwin Libamba5, Frank Chimbwandira5, Dermot Maher8.
Abstract
The scale-up of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Malawi was based on a public health approach adapted to its resource-poor setting, with principles and practices borrowed from the successful tuberculosis control framework. From 2004 to 2015, the number of new patients started on ART increased from about 3000 to over 820,000. Despite being a small country, Malawi has made a significant contribution to the 15 million people globally on ART and has also contributed policy and service delivery innovations that have supported international guidelines and scale up in other countries. The first set of global guidelines for scaling up ART released by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2002 focused on providing clinical guidance. In Malawi, the ART guidelines adopted from the outset a more operational and programmatic approach with recommendations on health systems and services that were needed to deliver HIV treatment to affected populations. Seven years after the start of national scale-up, Malawi launched a new strategy offering all HIV-infected pregnant women lifelong ART regardless of the CD4-cell count, named Option B+. This strategy was subsequently incorporated into a WHO programmatic guide in 2012 and WHO ART guidelines in 2013, and has since then been adopted by the majority of countries worldwide. In conclusion, the Malawi experience of ART scale-up has become a blueprint for a public health response to HIV and has informed international efforts to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030.Entities:
Keywords: Antiretroviral therapy; HIV/AIDS; Malawi; Policy; World Health Organization
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27600800 PMCID: PMC5012047 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3620-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Characteristics and outcomes of patients ever started on antiretroviral treatment (ART) in Malawi up to June 30th, 2015
| Number | (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Total ART clinic registrations (these include first-time ART initiations, re-initiations after treatment interruption and patients transferring from one site to another) | 1,025,754 | (100) |
| Registration type: | ||
| First time ART initiations | 820,367 | (80) |
| Gender at ART initiation: | ||
| Male | 369,284 | (36) |
| Age at ART initiation: | ||
| Adults aged 15 years and above | 936,603 | (91) |
| Reason for starting ART: | ||
| Presumed severe HIV disease | 3520 | (<1) |
| Primary outcomes by 30 June 2015:a | ||
| Alive on ART | 565,105 | (69) |
| Total died: | ||
| Died month 1 | 19,087 | (25) |
ART antiretroviral therapy, WHO World Health Organization, HIV human immunodeficiency virus
athese are primary outcomes for those who were first-time ART initiations (N = 820367
The data are taken and modified from reference 4
Main similarities and differences between the WHO 2003 ART Guidelines and the Malawi 2003 ART Guidelines
| WHO 2003 ART Guidelines | Malawi 2003 ART Guidelines | |
|---|---|---|
| When to start ART | Stage 4, Stage 3, Stage 2 with CD4 count or Total Lymphocyte count below threshold, Stage 1 with CD4 count below threshold | Followed WHO Guidance |
| What to start | Choice of 4 first-line ART regimens based on d4T/AZT, 3TC or EFV/NVP | One first-line ART regimen only (d4T + 3TC + NVP) with alternatives if toxicity occurred |
| How to start ART | No specific advice | Advice about staging patients, group counselling and individual counselling and how to manage the first 2 weeks on half-dose nevirapine |
| Clinical and laboratory monitoring | Recommended tiered laboratory capabilities based on level of health care facility | Emphasised clinical monitoring only due to poor country-wide laboratory infrastructure |
| Adherence to medication | General advice about adherence and monitoring | Specific advice around pill counting |
| Children | Advice about dosing—recommendations for not splitting fixed-dose tablets | Advice about splitting first-line fixed-dose ART according to weight |
| HIV-Tuberculosis | Advice based on CD4 count or consideration of ART based on clinical judgement | Advice about starting all HIV-infected TB patients on ART in continuation phase with isoniazid and ethambutol |
| Standardised treatment outcomes on life-long ART | No advice given | Standardised treatment outcomes defined |
| Programmatic monitoring, recording and reporting | No advice given | Advice about patient identity cards, patient treatment master cards, patient ART registers and patient cohort analysis |
| Supervision | No advice given | Advice about quarterly supervision of all ART clinics including drug security checks |
| ARV drug procurement and distribution | No advice given | Advice about “start packs” and “continuation packs” and how to forecast drug needs |
ART antiretroviral therapy, WHO World Health Organization, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, TB tuberculosis, d4T stavudine, AZT zidovudine, NVP nevirapine, EFV efavirenz
Advantages of Option B+ in Malawi
| Advantage | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Simple to implement | One tablet a day of TDF + 3TC + EFV for the woman with NVP infant prophylaxis for 6 weeks. Reinforces the nationwide message that ART is taken for life; procurement and distribution needs for the country made easier compared with having Option A or Option B. |
| Reduced vertical transmission from mother to child | For current pregnancy ART offers protection from time of administration and is continued in breast feeding period. For future pregnancies, ART offers protection from time of conception. |
| Avoids stop-start ART | Interrupted ART has risks for increased morbidity and mortality. |
| Improved maternal health and survival | Post-partum women in Zimbabwe with CD4 count > 350 cells/mm3 have an elevated risk of death six times higher than non-infected women [ |
| Reduced sexual transmission of HIV to discordant couples | HIV-infected persons on ART have significantly reduced risk of HIV transmission through sexual intercourse to non-infected partners even at high CD4 cell counts [ |
| Reduced risk of tuberculosis | ART reduces the risk of tuberculosis in people living with HIV, even at high CD4 cell counts [ |
| Treats hepatitis B infection | Tenofovir and lamivudine are active against hepatitis B virus, and about 15 % of people living with HIV in Malawi are also infected with hepatitis B. |
ART antiretroviral therapy, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, TB tuberculosis, TDF tenofovir, 3TC lamivudine, EFV efavirenz, NVP nevirapine
Evolution of national and international guidance, and supporting evidence
| Policy | Year of implementation in Malawi | Year recommended by WHO | Supporting evidence from randomized trials or systematic reviews |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lifelong cotrimoxazole preventive therapy | 2006 | 2006 WHO Cotrimoxazole Guidelines [ | Reference [ |
| Task shifting for the delivery of ART | 2003 | 2008 WHO Guidelines for task shifting [ | References [ |
| Decentralization of ART delivery | 2003 | 2013 WHO Consolidated Guidelines [ | References [ |
| PMTCT Option B+ | 2011 | 2012 WHO Programmatic Update [ | None |
| 2013 WHO Consolidated Guidelines [ |
ART antiretroviral therapy, PMTCT prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV