| 20 Juillet 2017
20 July 2017 | GENEVA: The  World Health Organization (WHO) alerts countries to the increasing  trend of resistance to HIV drugs detailed in a report based on national  surveys conducted in several countries. The Organization warns that this  growing threat could undermine global progress in treating and  preventing HIV infection if early and effective action is not taken.
 
 The 2017 WHO HIV Drug Resistance report shows that in 6 of the 11  countries surveyed in Africa, Asia and Latin America, over 10% of people  starting antiretroviral therapy had a strain of HIV that was resistant  to some of the most widely used HIV medicines. Once the threshold of 10%  has been reached, WHO recommends those countries to urgently review  their HIV treatment programmes.
 “Antimicrobial drug resistance is a growing challenge to global health  and sustainable development,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus,  Director-General, WHO. “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.”
 HIV drug resistance develops when people do not adhere to a prescribed  treatment plan, often because they do not have consistent access to  quality HIV treatment and care.  Individuals with HIV drug resistance  will start to fail therapy and may also transmit drug-resistant viruses  to others. The level of HIV in their blood will increase, unless they  change to a different treatment regimen, which could be more expensive –  and, in many countries, still harder to obtain.
 
 Of the 36.7 million people living with HIV worldwide, 19.5 million  people were accessing antiretroviral therapy in 2016. The majority of  these people are doing well, with treatment proving highly effective in  suppressing the HIV virus. But a growing number is experiencing the  consequences of drug resistance.
 WHO is therefore issuing new guidelines to help countries address HIV  drug resistance. These recommend that countries monitor the quality of  their treatment programmes and take action as soon as treatment failure  is detected.
 
 "We need to ensure that people who start treatment can stay on effective  treatment, to prevent the emergence of HIV drug resistance," said Dr  Gottfried Hirnschall, Director of WHO’s HIV Department and Global  Hepatitis Programme. “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.”
 
 Increasing HIV drug resistance trends could lead to more infections and  deaths. Mathematical modelling 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 US$650 million during  this time.
 
 Tackling HIV drug resistance will require the active involvement of a  broad range of partners. A new five-year Global Action Plan calls on all  countries and partners to join efforts to prevent, monitor and respond  to HIV drug resistance and to protect the ongoing progress towards the  Sustainable Development Goal of ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030. In  addition, WHO has developed new tools to help countries monitor HIV drug  resistance, improve the quality of treatment programmes and transition  to new HIV treatments, if needed.
 
 The 2017 WHO HIV Drug Resistance report was co-authored by the  Global Fund and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA : 
 
 Dr Marijke Wijnroks, Interim Executive Director, the Global Fund observed:
 
 “This new report shows a worrying picture of increasing levels of HIV  drug resistance and, if unchecked, it will be a major risk to program  impact,” said Marijke Wijnroks, Interim Executive Director of the Global  Fund. “We strongly recommend implementing WHO recommendations for early  warning indicators and HIV drug resistance surveys in every national  plan for antiretroviral therapy, and to consider funding them through  Global Fund grants or reprogramming.”
 
 Dr Shannon Hader, Director of CDC’s Division of Global HIV and TB, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, added:
 
 “The new report pulls together key HIV drug resistance survey findings  from across the globe that, taken together with other national-level  data, confirm we must be forward-thinking in our efforts to combat  resistance: scaling up viral load testing, improving the quality of  treatment programs, and transitioning to new drugs like dolutegravir, “  said Dr. Hader. “ Overall high rates of viral suppression across three  recent national Population-based HIV Impact Assessments showed that  present first- line regimens remain largely effective. However, special  attention to populations at-risk for higher resistance, such as  pediatrics, adolescents, pregnant women and key populations, will be  critical to target more urgent interventions. We call on the global  community for continued vigilance and responsiveness.”









