While my last two posts cover hopeful efforts, there is a huge amount to be done still. The following press release from the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative is heartbreaking but important information. It was released with permission to share.
[Geneva, Switzerland/New York, USA - 1 December 2011]
Children with HIV/AIDS Falling Through the Cracks of Treatment Scale-Up Efforts
Less than one-quarter (23%) of children with HIV/AIDS who need treatment
are getting it, according to a report released by the World Health
Organization (WHO) on the occasion of World AIDS Day (1 December 2011).
Although treatment coverage for adults has been steadily climbing and
has now reached approximately half of those in need, coverage for
children is lagging far behind, highlighted the Drugs for Neglected
Diseases initiative (DNDi), a non-profit research and development
organization that has recently launched a new paediatric HIV drug
development programme.
‘Children with HIV/AIDS are falling
through the cracks’, said Dr Bernard Pécoul, Executive Director of the
DNDi. ‘250,000 children died of HIV-related complications in 2010 –
that’s nearly 700 each day. This is simply unacceptable.’
There
are several reasons for this situation – including lack of access for
pregnant women to antenatal care, HIV testing, and antiretrovirals
(ARVs) to prevent mother-to-child transmission and treat expecting
mothers, as well as difficulties diagnosing HIV in infants. But one of
the most important, and overlooked, is the lack of suitable formulations
of ARVs adapted for children, particularly babies and toddlers. The
reason for this neglect lies, ironically, with the success of the
virtual elimination of HIV among newborns in wealthy countries.
‘There’s
little profit to be made from developing treatments for the millions of
children with HIV/AIDS, 90% of whom are the poorest of the poor in
sub-Saharan Africa, and the lack of market incentive means
pharmaceutical companies do not develop ARVs adapted to their needs’, Dr
Pécoul continued. ‘Without treatment, half of the children born with
HIV die before their second birthday.’
WHO recommends immediate
ART for all HIV-positive children less than two years old, but the
safety and correct dosing have not been established in very young
children for the majority of ARVs approved for adults. In addition, key
existing paediatric ARV formulations taste bad, require impractical
multiple liquid preparations and refrigeration, and have undesirable
interactions with tuberculosis (TB) drugs.
DNDi’s new paediatric
HIV programme aims to develop an improved first-line therapy for
children under three years of age. Ideally, this ARV combination therapy
needs to be easy to administer and better tolerated by children than
current drugs, as well as heat stable and easily dispersible
(dissolvable in water or breast milk). It must also carry minimal risk
for developing resistance and require minimum weight adjustments.
Finally, any new formulations must be compatible with TB drugs.
‘Given
the current funding crisis, we are deeply concerned that children with
HIV/AIDS – who are already invisible and largely voiceless – will fall
even further down on the agenda’, said Dr Marc Lallemant, Head of DNDi’s
Paediatric HIV Programme. ‘And while everything possible needs to be
done to achieve the long-term goal of “eliminating“ new infections among
infants, including through scale-up of prevention of mother-to-child
transmission programmes, a more serious response is urgently needed for
HIV-positive children today.’
###
DNDi is a
not-for-profit research and development organization working to deliver
new treatments for neglected diseases, in particular human African
trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness), leishmaniasis, Chagas disease,
malaria, and, with the recent expansion of its portfolio, specific
helminth infections, and paediatric HIV. DNDi was established in 2003 by
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the Oswaldo
Cruz Foundation from Brazil, the Indian Council of Medical Research, the
Kenya Medical Research Institute, the Ministry of Health of Malaysia,
and the Pasteur Institute of France. The Special Programme for Tropical
Disease Research (TDR) serves as a permanent observer. Since 2003, DNDi
has delivered five new treatments for neglected patients with malaria,
sleeping sickness, and visceral leishmaniasis.
www.dndi.org
Media contact:
Oliver Yun, Communications Manager
DNDi North America (New York)
Mobile: +1.646.266.5216
Tel: +1.646.616.8681
Email: oyun@dndi.org
Violaine Dällenbach, Press and Communications Manager
DNDi (Geneva)
Mobile: +41.79.424.1474
Tel: +41.22.906.92 47
Email: vdallenbach@dndi.org
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