| Literature DB >> 30657770 |
Jeb Jones1, Patrick S Sullivan1, James W Curran1.
Abstract
Substantial progress has been made towards the goal of ending the HIV/AIDS epidemic due to advancements in both prevention and treatment of HIV. However, major challenges still remain. We describe basic principles of epidemic control in the context of HIV and identify a number of attainable goals in terms of control and elimination of HIV in specific populations and risk groups, given currently available HIV prevention and treatment methods. Currently available HIV prevention methods make it a feasible goal to eliminate HIV transmission attributable to mother-to-child transmission and blood transfusions. Reductions in transmission attributable to sexual behavior and injection drug use are feasible, but elimination of these modes of transmission will require further advancements in behavioral and biomedical HIV prevention. With regard to HIV-related mortality, we argue that elimination of death due to HIV-related causes is a feasible goal. HIV-related deaths should be treated as sentinel events triggering epidemiological investigation into the breakdowns in the HIV care continuum that led to them. We briefly discuss additional considerations that will affect the success of HIV prevention programs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30657770 PMCID: PMC6338352 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Aspirational but feasible goals for control and elimination of HIV incidence and HIV-related mortality based on existing methods.
| Control | ||
| HIV Transmission | HIV Mortality | |
| Modes of Transmission | Sexual | N/A—recommend goal of elimination (rather than control) for HIV mortality |
| Tools | PrEP | |
| Barriers | Stigma | |
| Elimination | ||
| HIV Transmission | HIV Mortality | |
| Modes of Transmission | Mother-to-child | N/A |
| Tools | Prenatal HIV testing | HIV testing |
| Barriers | Awareness | Stigma |
| Comments | Uniquely feasible opportunities to completely eliminate HIV incidence attributable to these two modes of transmission | N/A |
Abbreviations: ARV, antiretroviral; N/A, nonapplicable; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; VMMC, voluntary medical male circumcision.