Wednesday, April 12, 2017 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon 17 Vaccine, improved treatment key to control of HIV pandemic By David Statth Oregon State University C O RVA L L I S – Development and widespread use of a vaccine that’s even partially effective against HIV, along with more prog- ress toward diagnosis and treatment, offer the best hopes for turning the corner on a global pandemic that’s still spiraling out of control, researchers reported today. Even though HIV and AIDS can now be effectively treated in most cases, actual control of the epidemic is elu- sive – not just in the develop- ing world, but also the United States, scientists said today in a report in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. A new analysis of the pos- sible future of HIV/AIDS, and what steps might best help address the issue, was pub- lished by researchers from Oregon State University and the Yale School of Public Health, in work supported by the National Institutes of Health. Scientists have developed a model of HIV progression, transmission and interven- tion tailored to 127 countries around the world. Data in the report show that HIV infections are surg- ing, millions of people who have been diagnosed are not getting treatment, and the battle against the epidemic would be hugely aided by a vaccine. Just since 2010, the global prevalence of HIV infections has increased to 37 million individuals. In 2014, 1.2 million people in the U.S. were infected. The good news is that 87 percent of those infections have been diagnosed, which is near the United Nations target estab- lished in 2013. The bad news is that of those diagnosed cases, only about half – 52 percent – of people known to have HIV in the U.S. are being treated. The U.S. is 50th in the world in reaching U.N. goals for diagnosis, treatment and effective control. “Both around the world and in the U.S., HIV and AIDS are still nowhere close to being under control,” said Jan Medlock, an associate professor and mathemati- cal epidemiologist in the OSU College of Veterinary Medicine, and lead author on the new study. “Given the efforts made against HIV/AIDS and the fact it can now be treated, the continued rate of spread is sur- prising,” Medlock said. “Even the cost of drugs, at least for the initial treatments, is rela- tively low. But this problem is still getting worse, not better, and our research suggests the value of prospective vaccines could be very significant.” Under the “status quo” levels of intervention, the research found, the world may expect about 49 million new cases of HIV infection during the next 20 years. If ambitious targets for diagno- sis, treatment and viral sup- pression are reached, 25 mil- lion of these new infections could be prevented, the study concluded. Adding a vaccine by 2020 that was even 50 per- cent effective could prevent another 6.3 million infections, and might have the potential to reverse the HIV pandemic. A concern is that the goals set by the United Nations for diagnosis and treatment “may be more aspirational than practical,” the researchers wrote in their study. The lat- est U.N. targets, established in 2014, are “95-95-95,” meaning a 95 percent success rate, by country, in diagnosing HIV infections; treating those infected; and achieving viral suppression in those being treated. Some countries are near that, others not even close. In Botswana, 22 percent of all people over age 15 have HIV, but the diagnosis and treat- ment goals are at 80-97-90. South Africa has a similar rate of infections but much less effective treatment. Civil unrest in Afghanistan and Yemen, as well as harsh drug laws in Indonesia, have hampered screening and diag- nosis, the researchers said in their study. Malaysia, the United States and India have high rates of diagnosis but struggle to engage people in actual treatment. “The U.S. approach to controlling HIV infections and treatment is grossly inad- equate,” Medlock said. “We diagnose people, but then they aren’t getting the treatment they need.” Due to these concerns and the large gap between goals and current reality, the search for an effective vaccine gains even more importance, the researchers said. They point out that even achieving the U.N. goals in many coun- tries — including the U.S. — would not be sufficient to reverse the growth of people living with HIV. Vaccines already exist, but are mostly in clinical trials and have less effectiveness than hoped for. One existing candidate has about 60 per- cent efficacy for the first year after vaccination, dropping to 31 percent efficacy 3.5 years later. Last November, a modi- fied version of this vaccine began large-scale, phase-three trials in South Africa, with hopes for higher efficacy. However, even lacking complete efficacy, vaccines could be crucially important, the new analysis showed. Even without improvements in current global levels of diagnosis, treatment and viral suppression, the study sug- gested that a vaccine with 50 percent efficacy could avert 17 million new HIV infec- tions during the next 20 years. A combined approach of better diagnosis, treatment and a vaccine is still the best bet, the report concluded. Especially helpful would be to target interventions to high- risk groups. Bend Memorial Clinic Bend Memorial Clinic in Sisters has been taking care of local families for years. 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