| Literature DB >> 30288321 |
Tongai G Maponga1, Rachel Matteau Matsha2, Sébastien Morin3, Andrew Scheibe4, Tracy Swan5, Isabelle Andrieux-Meyer6, C Wendy Spearman7, Marina B Klein8, Jürgen Kurt Rockstroh9.
Abstract
The International AIDS Society convened the 3rd International HIV/Viral Hepatitis Co-Infection Meeting on 17 July 2016 as part of the pre-conference program preceding the 21st International AIDS Conference held in Durban, South Africa. The meeting brought together a diversity of scientific, technical and community interests to discuss opportunities and challenges for increased prevention, diagnosis and treatment of viral hepatitis in people living with HIV, particularly in low- and middle-income settings. The objectives of the meeting were:i.To review the latest therapeutic developments in viral hepatitis;ii.To identify challenges such as high cost of medications for hepatitis C virus (HCV) and risk of developing viral resistance, and successes, such as the provision of HCV treatment in community-based settings, movements to reduce drug costs and increasing access, in relation to scaling up diagnosis, screening, antiviral treatment and prevention of viral hepatitis;iii.To advance the agenda for elimination of viral hepatitis as a public health problem. Discussions centred around the six key interventions outlined by the World Health Organization Global Health Sector Strategy on Viral Hepatitis 2016-2021: hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccination (including birth dose); safe injection practices plus safe blood; harm reduction among people who inject drugs; safer sex practices; hepatitis B treatment; and hepatitis C cure. This article summarizes the main issues and findings discussed during the pre-conference meeting. One of the recommendations from the meeting delegates is universal implementation of birth dose vaccination for HBV without further delay to prevent mother-to-child transmission of infection. There is also the need to implement screening and treatment of hepatitis among pregnant women. A call was made for concerted efforts to be put together by all stakeholders towards addressing some of the structural barriers, including criminalization of drug use, discrimination and stigma that people living with viral hepatitis face. Finally, the need for greater advocacy was highlighted to enable access to therapy of viral hepatitis at lower cost than currently prevails. Implementation of these resolutions will help in achieving the target of eliminating viral hepatitis as a public health threat.Entities:
Keywords: 21st International AIDS Conference; Access and equity of treatment; Epidemiology; HIV/viral hepatitis co-infection; Hepatitis B; Hepatitis C; Prevention
Year: 2017 PMID: 30288321 PMCID: PMC6171003 DOI: 10.1186/s41124-017-0025-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatol Med Policy ISSN: 2059-5166
Fig. 1a shows countries covered under voluntary licensing agreements from Gilead Sciences and Bristol-Meyers Squib, while 1B shows the registration status of Sovaldi® (Gilead Sciences) and Daklinza® (Bristol-Meyers Squib) worldwide. The voluntary licensing agreements exclude some countries where the burden of hepatitis C is very high, while these drugs remain unregistered in sub-Saharan African countries and parts of Asia. (Source: http://mapcrowd.org)
List of speakers and titles of presentationa
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Slide sets presented at the meeting are publicly available on the AIDS 2016 Online Conference Programme at http://programme.aids2016.org/Programme/Session/1157 and on the IAS website at http://www.iasociety.org/HIV-programmes/Co-Infections/3rd-International-HIV-Viral-Hepatitis-Co-Infection-Meeting/Hepatitis-Meeting-Presentations
Organizing committee - 3rd International HIV/Viral Hepatitis Co-Infection Meeting
| Name | Organization | City, Country | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marina Klein | McGill University | Montréal, Canada | Co-chair |
| Wendy Spearman | University of Cape Town | Cape Town, South Africa | Co-chair |
| Monique Andersson | Stellenbosch University | Stellenbosch, South Africa | Convener of HBV prevention and management theme |
| Isabelle Andrieux-Meyer | MSF | Geneva, Switzerland | Co-convener of HCV and HBV access theme |
| Anchalee Avihingsanon | HIV-NAT | Bangkok, Thailand | Co-convener of epidemiology and disease burden theme |
| Sanjay Bhagani | Royal Free Hospital | London, UK | Co-convener of complex issues in HCV and HBV theme |
| Christoph Boesecke | University of Bonn | Bonn, Germany | EACS Liaison |
| Laurent Castera | Hôpital Beaujon | Paris, France | EASL Liaison |
| Curtis Cooper | CIHR Canadian HIV Trials Network (CTN) | Ottawa, Canada | Co-convener of HCV therapeutic development theme |
| Greg Dore | Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales | Sydney, Australia | Convener of treatment in special populations theme |
| Jordan Feld | University of Toronto | Toronto, Canada | Convener of HBV therapeutic development theme |
| Karine Lacombe | Hôpital Saint-Antoine | Paris, France | Convener of epidemiology and disease burden theme |
| Gail Matthews | Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales | Sydney, Australia | Convener of complex issues in HCV and HBV theme |
| Sébastien Morin | International AIDS Society | Geneva, Switzerland | Point contact for coordination with the IAS and AIDS 2016 |
| Marion Peters | University of California | San Francisco, USA | Co-convener of HBV therapeutic development theme |
| Jürgen Rockstroh | University of Bonn | Bonn, Germany | Convener of treatment in special populations theme |
| Mark Sulkowski | Viral Hepatitis Center, Johns Hopkins Division of Infectious Diseases | Baltimore, USA | Convener of HCV therapeutic development theme |
| Tracy Swan | MSF Access Campaign | New York, USA | Convener of HCV and HBV access theme |