January 1, 2005 The benefits of treatment are clear. Patients are doing well: their immune systems are stronger, they are gaining weight, and are able to live fuller and longer lives. Clinical results in MSF programs, which parallel those found in wealthy countries, have been published in peer-reviewed medical journals and presented at international conferences. Consolidated 2004 data from all MSF projects show a median CD4 increase of 135 cells after one year of therapy and 208 after two years of therapy and average weight gain of three to five kilograms. Probability of survival after two years on treatment was 85.3 percent (73.2 percent including both deaths and patients lost to follow-up). In addition, adherence to treatment is very good, often exceeding 90 percent. Number of Patients on antiretroviral treatment LESSONS LEARNED SO FAR • Simplifying treatment regimens
• Simplifying patient inclusion criteria • Free treatment and adherence • Decentralizing care
• Seeking out least expensive quality ARV • Community participation BEATING THE PANDEMIC Research priorities • Simple rapid diagnostic tests and monitoring tools
• Specific pediatric formulations • TB and HIV
• Affordable second-line drugs adapted to resource-poor settings MSF has serious concerns about supplies of affordable quality medicines in the future. On January 1, 2005, all members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) are required to be fully compliant with the WTO TRIPS (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) agreement and start granting 20 year patents for pharmaceutical products. Only the least developed countries can postpone this until 2016. This means that affordable sources of new medicines will gradually dry up as patents will be granted on all new medicines and some existing medicines produced by generic manufacturers in countries like India. It is unlikely that affordable generic sources of second-line ARVs will be available any time soon. In general, lack of competition between manufacturers will result in higher drug prices.
Infrastructure and human resources • Staffing • Training |
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© 2013 Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
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