Fareed Abdullah on ‘missed opportunities’ in the National Strategic Plan

This blog first appeared on What’sUpHIV as part of a series covering the 8th South African AIDS Conference.

There are many “missed opportunities” in the National Strategic Plan (NSP) for HIV and TB, said Fareed Abdullah, the head of AIDS and TB research at the Medical Research Council and former SANAC CEO, at the closing of the South African AIDS Conference.

The NSP has been criticized by a number of civil society groups and this has culminated in two demonstrations being held during the conference – one by a general group of activists and another by sex worker activists.

At a press briefing on the closing day of the conference, the South African National AIDS Council (SANAC) defended the NSP, saying that while it was “imperfect”, it had incorporated viewpoints from many sectors of society. SANAC largely blamed the critique of the plan on individuals and organizations who were unhappy with their loss of leadership in SANAC and the transformation that was taking place within its structures. They also rejected claims of corruption within the council.

“We now know that we cannot treat our way out of this epidemic,” said Abdullah. Rather, prevention interventions would be the answer, where the social and structural drivers around HIV were focussed on.

He said that a lot of work would need to be done to find the “sweet spot” of how much money should be invested in specific interventions such as the contribution of gender-based violence to HIV transmission, the role of alcohol as well as social factors such as hunger.

While the NSP provides a “good broad framework”, there are areas that are lacking, believes Abdullah. However, he said that there is still the possibility of improving the NSP.

One of Abdullah’s concerns is that the “toolbox” provided in the NSP “doesn’t match the impact that we’re looking for”. The NSP aims for a 37% reduction in new HIV infections by 2022.

He said that there is the need for a prevention agency that has substantial resources, a large reach and is able to implement multiple programs at community level.

“But at the moment we don’t really have an agency with the wherewithal, the authority and the institutional capacity [to do this].”

While there were “many steps forward on TB”, Abdullah said that “TB is nothing short of a national crisis”. A crisis that he believes needs to be addressed through leadership, management, logistics and an investment in drugs.

“It needs nothing short of a revolution in a short space of time,” said Abdullah.

As for the NSP’s much-talked about failure to include a recommendation for the decriminalization of sex work, Abdullah said that this was another “missed opportunity”.

Low targets were set for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), something that could be rapidly scaled up for key population groups such as sex workers, men who have sex with men and transwomen, said Abdullah.

“For 20 years [we] have always said that key populations are not essential but I think [we have] been proven to be fundamentally incorrect about that.”

He also warned about drug use becoming a major contributor to HIV transmission in the next five years.

Our Vaginas Are Our Own Affair

This blog post, written by Thabo Molelekwa, first appeared on What’sUpHIV as part of a series covering the 8th South African AIDS Conference.

Dr. Tlaleng Mofokeng, 33, has harsh words for those who want to own women’s vaginas. “Everyone has an opinion about the vagina,” she said. Young women in particular, she said, are constantly judged.

“They are told to keep their legs closed; stay in school: use birth control and say no to blessers. Yet when we ask for services such as contraceptives and abortions, we are criticized.”

Dr. Tlaleng is the chairperson of the track examining social, political, economic and Health Systems at the 8th SA AIDS Conference in Durban. It was about a decade ago in medical school when Free State-born Tlaleng Mofokeng realized that her interest lay in sexual health care, reproductive health care and ethics and rights. She now a runs medical practice in sexual health at DISA clinic in Sandton, Gauteng.

She is also widely known for her Sunday Times column on reproductive health and her no-nonsense radio slot on the same subject on Khaya FM.

Every week, around 2,000 young women are infected with HIV. But most of the HIV prevention campaigns are male-centred. Female condoms are not really available, for example, says Dr. Tlaleng. “When having sex, we must wait for the man to put on a condom. Yet we are the ones who are a higher risk of getting infections.”

Dr. Tlaleng believes that the policies on HIV and STIs in schools are not implemented correctly. “They talk mainly about abstinence instead of talking about other prevention methods. There are young people right now who are HIV (positive) in school and no one is talking to them.”

Dr. Tlaleng is also concerned that young people born with HIV have very little information about how to disclose their HIV status to their partner.

“During my last year in medical school I launched the first youth friendly clinic as a ground breaker in Matatiele.” Said Dr. Tlaleng “And with support from my University we did a very good job to ensure that the young people there were connected to other people in terms of institutional support.”

Circumcising Babies ‘Would Be Acceptable’

This blog post, written by Zizo Zikali, first appeared on What’sUpHIV as part of a series covering the 8th South African AIDS Conference.

The department of health in partnership with USAID and The Centre for HIV and AIDS Prevention Studies (CHAPS) are working together to fight the HIV/AIDS epidemic by developing a safe and sustainable service delivery model for early infant male circumcision in South Africa.

Chief executive officer of CHAPS Dirk Taljaard said CHAPS conducted a study examining the feasibility of early infant male circumcision in Soweto and Orange farm in Johannesburg, Gauteng. Nearly 70 percent of 304 urban mothers and 142 fathers showed interest of circumcising their sons before they were six weeks old.

“The study concluded that early infant male circumcision would be acceptable in the country; despite the pull of traditional circumcision during adolescence among certain ethnic groups. However, there should still be discussions at national, provincial, district and local level as soon as possible.”

There was some dissent. Siyabonga Zulu, a 34-year-old man from Umlazi, south of Durban, believes that circumcising a minor would be violating their rights. He believed a child should be circumcised only when he has reached an age when he could decide for himself whether to opt for medical or traditional circumcision.

HIV Prevention at This Week’s South African AIDS Conference

The South African AIDS Conference (SA AIDS) kicks off Tuesday at the International Convention Centre in Durban. SA AIDS is an energizing, biennial conference that brings together a cross-section of the people and organizations sustaining the HIV/AIDS movement in South Africa.

This year’s theme, The Long Walk to Prevention: Every Voice Counts, comes at a critical time for HIV research and rollout in South Africa. In a time of both great uncertainty, but also of exciting dynamism in the prevention field, AVAC is thrilled to see the conference focusing on this essential component of a comprehensive AIDS response.

Whether or not you’ll be Durban, you can engage with AVAC and partners at SA AIDS in a variety of ways. We have gathered a full roadmap of prevention research-oriented events and presentations. Download our roadmap here, and the full conference program here.

Below, we’ve highlighted some key sessions.

  • Community Village — An interactive and participatory space to discuss cutting-edge issues in HIV, share knowledge and skills and network. Open to conference participants and to the general public.
  • Research Literacy Networking Zone — Wits RHI in partnership with AVAC, SAHTAC and APHA will disseminate research literacy materials and conduct fun and educational games focused on HIV prevention research R&D and advocacy. The zone will be located in the Women’s Networking Zone within the Community Village.
  • HIV Prevention and SRHR Masterclass
    Tuesday, June 13 – Thursday, June 15, 7:00 – 8:30 — Hosted by the African Alliance for HIV prevention at the Hilton Hotel.
  • Satellite Session: PrEP (sponsored by Gilead)
    Tuesday, June 13, 11:30 – 13:00 — Located in Hall 8b.
  • Up Your Game: Play to Learn About HIV Prevention and Research
    Tuesday, June 13, 12:00 – 13:00 — An HIV prevention research literacy game hosted on the main stage in the Community Village by AVAC, WRHI, SAHTAC and APHA.
  • Dapivirine Ring Licensure Program
    Tuesday, 13 June, 18:00 – 20:00 — This interactive satellite session, hosted by IPM, will showcase the developments in the dapivirine vaginal ring program. Located in Hall 5.
  • Basic Science: Putting the spanner in the works – the nuts and bolts of HIV prevention
    Wednesday, June 14, 9:00 – 11:00 — A roundtable plenary discussion with leading scientists. Located in Hall 1.
  • Improving HIV prevention by investing in research and development and services
    Wednesday, June 14, 11:30 – 13:00 — This workshop will provide health advocates and technical experts from the HIV prevention sector a platform to share ideas on how to improve implementation of R&D policies, and streamline regulatory processes that support the development, introduction and scale of high-impact health technologies in South Africa. Located in Hall 10.
  • Contraception and HIV: What they say, what we hear, what needs to change — a young women’s dialogue
    Wednesday, June 14, 18:00 – 20:00 — A roundtable dialogue with young advocates. Located in the Women’s Networking Zone.

You can also meet the AVAC team, learn about the Advocacy Fellows Program and pick up copies of our materials at the Research Literacy Zone, located in the Women’s Networking Zone in the Community Village.

As always, AVAC will be posting live updates from the conference on its Twitter and Facebook pages. Follow all the conference proceedings via its hashtag #SAAIDS2017. And look for updates from a cadre of young community journalists whose conference updates will be posted on the WhatsUpHIV blog.

We look forward to seeing many of you in Durban. Please stop by to say hello!

Long-Acting Injectable Antiretrovirals for PrEP: Will the tail wag the drug?

Mark Mascolini is a medical journalist who writes about HIV news, research and global policies for the International AIDS Society and many publications. Emily Bass is the Director of Strategy & Content at AVAC.

A medicine you get only every two months to reduce your risk of acquiring HIV sounds like a great deal. And that could be an option in the future. But only if two big efficacy trials of long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA) show that it is safe and effective. The strategy in question is one shot of this long-acting antiretroviral (ARV) in the buttocks every 8 weeks. The questions the two trials are asking are whether this type of PrEP is safe and well tolerated and whether it will help shield trial participants—women, men who have sex with men (MSM), and transgender women (TGW)—from HIV.

We already know that long-acting CAB, an investigational HIV integrase inhibitor, prevents rectal, vaginal, and intravenous infection with simian HIV (SHIV) in monkeys. Studies in animals aren’t a guarantee of results in humans, but these and other data have helped move the candidate into human studies. A Phase 2 trial of CAB-LA for prevention (ECLAIR) was recently completed among men; the HPNT 077 Phase 2 trial among women and men is due to present results soon; and the drug is now moving into two efficacy trials (HPTN 083 and HPTN 084).

A combination of CAB-LA and another investigational injectable, the nonnucleoside antiretroviral rilpivirine (RPV), is being studied for treatment in people living with HIV and showing good results. In the treatment context, injectable ARVs are given to people who have undetectable viral loads using standard, pill-based regimens. So far it looks like long-acting injected CAB plus RPV every 4–8 weeks safely maintains HIV suppression. The combination has entered Phase 3 trials in people living with HIV who have been on antiretroviral therapy before, and those who have not. (RPV was also studied for long-acting PrEP in the HPTN 076 trial but is not moving forward into efficacy trials at this point.)

Despite this early run through the research gauntlet, pressing questions remain about the safety and routine use of long-acting injected antiretrovirals. Initial questions about acceptability can be partially explored now in the trials, but for injectable PrEP, as for any new strategy, there would need to be a robust agenda of follow-up investigation, should the efficacy trials show positive results. Some of the questions include:

  • Will there be adherence advantages of shots given every two months over daily pills in practice—and/or will intermittent injections raise other problems?
  • Will the good early side-effect scores of CAB-LA hold true outside clinical trials—or will the almost-routine injection reactions turn off possible bi-monthly-shot recipients?
  • Will the striking staying power of CAB-LA and RPV in a person’s body—the long duration that makes infrequent shots possible—lead to side effects whose risks outweigh the benefits and convenience of the tool?
  • In people with HIV who use long-acting CAB-LA and RPV, will HIV spawn resistant mutants during the months-long low-level drug “tail” that lingers when a long-acting dose is not followed by another?
  • In people who are HIV-negative and using CAB-LA for PrEP, what’s the strategy for dealing with the tail when coming off PrEP? Oral PrEP is one option but could be unpopular with people who opt for the injection. Yet exposure to HIV during the period when the drug is still in the body could lead to drug resistance, if infection occurs. In other words, will the tail wag the drug?

This report considers the evidence so far, with a focus on long-acting injectable CAB for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent HIV infection. Here’s what we know and don’t know right now.

We know an injection won’t be perfect for everyone.

Easier adherence remains the premier promise of long-acting antiretroviral PrEP or treatment. For lots of people, getting a shot in the butt every two months sounds much simpler than popping a Truvada (TDF/FTC) tablet every single day—or remembering to dose up before and after sex. But experience from many arenas—particularly contraceptives—tells us it won’t be the simpler choice for everyone. Countless people have no trouble remembering to swallow a multivitamin every day; they might more easily lose track of an every-eight-weeks multivitamin shot. Some women like a daily birth control pill; others prefer a long-acting method such as an implant or an injection. There will almost certainly be people who can take a daily PrEP pill with calendrical consistency but find the eight weeks between PrEP shots a slick slope to dosing amnesia.

The trials can’t predict preferences or the chances that people will fall into this two-month memory trap. Clinical trials of injectable PrEP or treatment require people to come to a clinic for their injections. We do know that women taking hormonal contraceptives can struggle with consistency and that research in the US and in sub-Saharan Africa has found that many women can forget to return for their scheduled contraceptive injection.

Trials of CAB-LA for PrEP start with four or five weeks of daily oral dosing to make sure people can tolerate the drug. But PrEP experts observe that these preliminary weeks of daily pill taking may prove challenging to people trying injected PrEP precisely because they struggle with once-a-day dosing.

We know frequent (or rare) side effects may pose safety concerns.

Safety data on long-acting CAB and RPV are accumulating from the trials to date. Through 32 weeks in the 286-person LATTE-2 trial of injected CAB/RPV for treatment, two people out of 115 (2 percent) getting their two-drug shots every eight weeks dropped out because of possible side effects (both injection-site problems), while six people out of 115 (5 percent) getting shots every four weeks stopped for possible side effects.

People living with HIV may be willing to put up with more antiretroviral side effects than people taking antiretroviral PrEP to avoid HIV infection. In the biggest CAB-LA for PrEP trial reported so far, ÉCLAIR, 106 men were assigned to the CAB group; of these, 94 completed the oral dosing phase and entered the injection phase. After four weeks of oral CAB, these men got CAB-LA every 12 weeks. Four of 94 men (4 percent) who started the shots quit the study because they couldn’t tolerate the injections. Overall, 75 men (80 percent) who started CAB shots had moderate to severe adverse events. Injection-site pain, itching or swelling accounted for the lion’s share of these problems, compared with ten men (48 percent) who received the placebo injection. ÉCLAIR concluded that the injection schedule of 800 mg of CAB-LA administered every 12 weeks was suboptimal when it came to maintaining the drug levels required for protection against HIV; the eight-weekly regimen is proposed as a solution. (Results from the HPTN 077 trial of CAB-LA among approximately 200 HIV-uninfected men and women in 8 cities in Brazil, Malawi, South Africa and the US are anticipated later this year.)

A 2016 paper that looked at all of the data from trials of CAB-LA for treatment or PrEP to date found that roughly three-quarters of participants had injection-site reactions, usually mild or moderate. Nodules popping up at injection sites can be stubborn. The same paper reported that about half of injection site nodules lasted 22 days, about one-third of an eight-week dosing interval. Outside the hand-holding discipline of clinical trials, people already squeamish about needles who nonetheless agree to a big shot in the behind every eight weeks may fast run out of patience if they find the shots painful.

Injection woes may be the most frequent problem with long-acting shots, but they may not be the most serious. The remarkable durability of injected drugs like CAB and RPV—the very trait that makes infrequent dosing possible—also poses their greatest risk. Once you stop taking antiretroviral pills, the drug is gone in a few days, and you can shut off drug exposure by removing an inserted drug delivery system like the dapivirine ring or an under-the-skin TAF implant. But once an injected drug starts soaking target cells, there’s no way to get rid of it. And that could mean there’s no way to get rid of an out-of-the-blue side effect. Taking CAB or RPV pills for several weeks could uncover side effects that warn prescribers away from injecting the drugs in a few people. But that strategy may miss a surprise reaction that comes only after a hefty loading dose gets plunged through a one-way needle. Such reactions will probably be rare but no less troubling to individuals affected.

We know the “tail” is something to track.

After a single dose of CAB-LA or RPV, the slow fade of drug from the body means drug levels eventually fall beneath a concentration that shuts down HIV—unless a person gets another shot in the prescribed time. In the ÉCLAIR trial, CAB-LA remained detectable in blood in 14 participants (17 percent) 52 weeks after the last injection. If someone taking CAB for PrEP forgets a shot long enough—or just stops—and keeps having sex, low CAB levels could permit HIV infection. And when HIV starts copying itself in the face of meager antiretroviral levels, it starts making resistant copies.

This is not a theoretical scenario. It already happened to a woman who got a single 300-mg intramuscular shot of RPV. She tested positive for HIV 84 days after the shot, and after 115 days the infecting virus carried a mutation that confers resistance to the whole nonnucleoside class. The researchers call this “a unique instance of infection with wild-type [nonmutant] HIV-1 and subsequent selection of resistant virus by persistent exposure to long-acting PrEP.” To avoid repeating this misadventure, a person taking a long-acting injectable would have to have a clear HIV prevention plan for several months after the last shot—some combination of complete condom use, behavior change or covering the slowly waning tail of the injectable with faithfully taken oral PrEP, like Truvada.

We know the trial designs are complex.

December 2016 saw the launch of HPTN 083, a 4500-person double-dummy, double-blind trial of injectable CAB-LA PrEP every eight weeks. The trial is enrolling MSM and TGW in countries in North and South America, Asia, as well as in South Africa. Researchers estimate it could take 3.5 years to complete HPTN 083 but note that the trial is “endpoint driven,” meaning that the timing depends on the frequency with which new HIV diagnoses occur in participants. HPTN 084, a parallel CAB-LA PrEP trial in women, is also a double-dummy, double-blind trial and is expected to start later this year.

Does “double-dummy double-blind” sound familiar? It might not. This and other terms are relatively new in the biomedical HIV prevention field. But times have changed. The advent of daily oral PrEP as a WHO-recommended prevention strategy has propelled changes in trials of other prevention strategies—including ARV-based and non-ARV based prevention alike. (AVAC has developed a plain language glossary of some of the commonly used terms HIV Prevention Trial Terms: An advocate’s guide.)

The designs for HPTN 083 and 084 are examples of what efficacy trials look like in the “post-placebo” era. In a placebo-controlled trial, people are randomly assigned to receive either an active agent (like oral PrEP pills) or an identical “dummy” candidate (a sugar pill or a saline injection). Both groups receive the same HIV prevention package. HIV prevention trials involving people whose primary risk is sexual exposure all provide condoms, diagnosis and treatment of sexually transmitted infections and behavior change; some also now provide referrals for voluntary medical male circumcision, PrEP and partner testing and treatment.

For now, PrEP is not part of the standard prevention package in all HIV prevention trials (e.g., vaccine studies and more). It’s being provided on referral in countries where PrEP is also part of the national policy. But this approach won’t work for trials of long-acting injectable PrEP. Trial ethics require that a trial of a new method (an injectable PrEP) be compared to existing effective methods in the same category (daily oral PrEP).

For an in-depth look at HPTN 084 trial and the “lexicon” associated with such studies, check out AVAC’s most recent issue of Px Wire.

To meet this ethical imperative and get a clear, usable answer, the trials have to ask a new kind of question: how does injectable PrEP compare to daily oral PrEP when it comes to reducing the risk of acquiring HIV?

Because of the way that statistics work, this question has to be phrased very precisely. Broadly speaking there are two questions PrEP trials can ask in the post-placebo era:

  • Is this new experimental product better than a placebo or an existing product, e.g., is injectable CAB-LA better than daily TDF/FTC? A superiority trial asks this kind of question.
  • Is this new experimental product equivalent to or not worse than the existing product, by a pre-specified margin? A non-inferiority trial asks this kind of question.

These weighty questions about injectable antiretroviral adherence, safety, and resistance will probably take a few years to answer because big efficacy trials have just started signing up recruits.

We know that clinical trial success is only one step—and doesn’t always translate to impact.

If injectable PrEP or treatment works in trials, there will still be lots to explore about delivery in the real world.

Most people with HIV see their provider every 4–6 months; most HIV-negative individuals who may be candidates for PrEP see their clinician much less often, if at all. That will have to change if providers intend to give people antiretroviral injections for treatment or prevention every two months. There will be many other questions too about who is willing to pay for long-acting ARVs, what types of programs these tools would belong in—and more.

As we’ve learned from many strategies—from HPV vaccine to oral PrEP—if you wait until there is evidence of efficacy to begin addressing these questions, then you’ve waited too long. AVAC is working with CHAI as part of the Gates Foundation-funded HIV Prevention Market Manager project to frame and address key questions about long-acting PrEP. At the same time, we are working with many of our partners in civil society to ensure that the trial designs are ethical, the goals well understood, and the outcomes on track to achieve the ultimate goal—a sustained end to epidemic levels of new HIV infections worldwide.

See the AVAC infographic on long-acting injectables for a nuts-and-bolts review of testing these agents for HIV treatment and prevention; see: HIV Prevention Trial Terms: An advocate’s guide for definitions of many of the terms used in this article.

PrEP Stymied in Europe: What’s the hold up?

Cindra is a Senior Program Manager at AVAC.

Europe is the birthplace of the smallpox vaccine and the Renaissance, among other treasures. So why can’t this continent that has brought forth such cornerstones of public health and flourishing civilization deliver oral PrEP—a mere pill a day to prevent HIV, which already exists and is being successfully implemented in several countries, including Brazil, Kenya, South Africa and the US.

To be fair, France has been rolling out daily oral PrEP (consisting of Truvada) for over a year and a handful of others—Norway, Scotland, Belgium and Portugal—recently committed to provision plans. But the majority of countries on the continent are still struggling to even start to take PrEP to scale—even though there has been a 60 percent spike in HIV incidence in the past decade.

The delay isn’t due to lack of demand or a framework for PrEP provision. The call for PrEP from civil society is loud and clear, evidenced by the do-it-yourself droves ordering PrEP over the internet, clinic hopping, pill sharing and/or smuggling PrEP drugs into countries where it’s not available via the health system.

It’s been more than a year since the European AIDS Clinical Society Guidelines recommended PrEP and Europe’s regulatory authority (EMA) approved Truvada (emtricitabine and tenofovir) for PrEP. In England, the National Health Service argued that it didn’t have the mandate to introduce PrEP programs, as HIV prevention was the responsibility of district health authorities. The English High Court ruled otherwise and clarified that NHS did indeed have the power to launch PrEP programs. Even policy makers are warming to the idea of PrEP as more data from countries where PrEP is becoming available come in, suggesting that PrEP is working as HIV prevention in real-world settings.

So what’s the hold up? Many are pointing to the drug company Gilead, the patent holder of Truvada, the only PrEP drug licensed in Europe. Recently, Gilead obtained an extension of its Truvada patent in England, where the original copyright expires this year. The pharma giant is likely to keep prices high while facing no competition from generic manufacturers until 2021. That’s almost four years in a country with 17 seroconversions a day.

As a response to Gilead’s motion to postpone its patent expiry in England, several generic producers filed a lawsuit that was kicked up to the Court of Justice of the European Union. Now any legal decision will apply to all EU member states, not only England. “If the court finds in favour of the generic companies, the cost of PrEP could be accommodated within current budgets through the savings made in treatment costs,” wrote UK clinician advocates Sheena McCormack and Marta Boffito in The Lancet.

In the meantime, some health systems have hit the pause button on piloting PrEP. England is one example where its PrEP implementation has been delayed largely due to the prohibitive costs of the branded Truvada drug. Gilead has refused to waive its patent even for pending implementation studies. A planned 10,000-participant trial was slated to have started early in the year, but recruitment is now unlikely to begin until July.

Similarly, in Italy, the Bologna Checkpoint—a community-run rapid HIV and STI testing center—was poised to begin its PrEP implementation project, but the launch was thwarted when Gilead declined to provide donated or even discounted Truvada. They were told the company would no longer support PrEP implementation pilots in Western countries. The Italians then approached Mylan, the makers of a generic form of Truvada licensed for treatment in Europe. At first the generic supplier—a plaintiff in the case against Gilead—was happy to do business with Checkpoint but then opted to wait until the lawsuit was settled in the hopes of acquiring full marketing authorization to supply the discounted drug. As of yet there is no scheduled court date for the generic companies v. Gilead.

Activist Giulio Corbelli, of the European AIDS Treatment Group, doesn’t think Gilead is cynically strategizing to block PrEP access in Europe. Rather, he says, the company simply pursues its commercial interests, creating barriers to access in the process. “They are not negotiating with the competent national authorities to identify a route for selling the drug; they are not supporting any implementation projects with their drug; and they are doing whatever they can to prevent other companies’ support of such projects,” he points out.

In addition to protecting its Truvada PrEP monopoly in Europe, Gilead has another bottom-line business incentive to slow European scale-up efforts. The company has released a low-dose version of Truvada, known as F/TAF, for treatment. Gilead has just completed recruitment for a large-scale PrEP study that will compare its new drug F/TAF with Truvada, with results due in 2020. If F/TAF proves to be as effective as Truvada in reducing HIV risk, Gilead can bring this new formulation of the drug to the European market—right in time to replace an extended expiration of the Truvada patent in 2021.

The PrEP in Europe Initiative (PEI) sent Gilead an open letter asking the company to surrender its Truvada Supplementary Protection Certificate (patent extension). However, it’s not likely the company will cave based on its previous intransigence around its shamefully priced hepatitis C drugs. Short of a Gilead walk-back, activists are encouraging health ministries to advocate for an expedited court case to finally rule on the patent extension so generic companies could hopefully get the green light to provide an affordable form of Truvada as PrEP. Or there might just be an uprising, another historic feat Europeans are known for.

In the Face of Complex HIV Vaccine Research, the Ground is Ripe for Renewed Advocacy and Activism

Daisy is the Communications Advisor at AVAC. Morenike is an Associate Professor at Obafemi Awolowo University and Coordinator of the New HIV Vaccine and Microbicide Advocacy Society (NHVMAS) in Ife, Nigeria.

Good Participatory Practice and community voices are needed now more than ever in the HIV vaccine research arena.

The world has its eyes trained on two large clinical trials in South Africa: HVTN 702, which is testing a classic ‘active immunization’ approach; and the antibody mediated prevention (AMP) study, testing ‘passive immunization’ against HIV. (HVTN 702 study is being conducted under the auspices of the HIV Vaccine Trials Network (HVTN), and the AMP study is jointly led by the HVTN and the HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN).

HVTN 702’s launch in late 2016 received wide and highly optimistic media coverage. Headlines like “Watch 1st person receive new HIV vaccine,” though inaccurate (the product being injected is a test vaccine), signal a widely shared hunger for an HIV vaccine that works. And at the HVTN Regional Meeting in Johannesburg last quarter, you could feel this optimism running through the presentations as updates on HVTN 702 and AMP were shared.

Part of a vaccine research project known locally as Uhambo, HVTN 702 is a 5-year clinical trial among 5400 individuals in South Africa. It is investigating the efficacy of a two-product vaccine candidate modeled on the prime-boost vaccine candidate that showed partial efficacy in the Thai RV144 trial 8 years ago.

AMP is also testing efficacy, but this time of intravenous infusions (a drip) of VRC01, a broadly-neutralizing anti-HIV antibody. AMP will enroll 1,500 female participants in Africa. (A parallel study is studing the same antibody among 2,700 men and transgender persons who have sex with men.)

Could HVTN 702 lead to a licensed vaccine? Will the AMP study show efficacy? The world should have those answers in about 5 years.

Working with a broad range of partners throughout the world, AVAC tracks, advocates for, and develops tools to support accelerated progress in HIV prevention globally. We monitor the use and spread of existing prevention options, as well as the research into new options such as microbicides, PrEP and vaccines.

The last two decades of the global search for an HIV vaccine has taught us to be patient; even promising candidates have yielded inconclusive, negative, or modestly positive results. With or without efficacy, however, analyses of the results of clinical trials offer tremendous gains, advancing our knowledge and informing future research.

This ‘learning’ aim of clinical research is something trial participants and the larger community should be well informed about. Comprehensive engagement with all stakeholders—a cornerstone of Good Participatory Practice (GPP) for clinical trials—can help achieve this awareness.

Good Participatory Practice (GPP) Guidelines were developed by AVAC and UNAIDS in 2007 and updated in 2011. They provide trial funders, sponsors, and implementers with systematic guidance on how to effectively engage all stakeholders in the design and conduct of biomedical HIV prevention trials. Today, GPP is being applied in biomedical research beyond HIV.

Good Participatory Practice makes research literacy a high priority for participants and their communities, providing a concrete foundation for people to understand the process, objectives, and limitations of clinical trials. GPP advocates for face to face engagement with communities and trial participants, complemented by communication through websites, online videos and printed materials. With a firm grasp of research literacy, people are more open to unexpected trial results.

GPP is essential in today’s highly complex HIV research landscape, which includes active and passive immunization approaches; novel antibody research; mucosal research to inform vaccine development; different ways to administer the test products (e.g. pills, gels, rings, injections, inserts, implants and infusions); cure research; an evolving Standard of Prevention (the standard package of prevention services offered to every participant who joins a trial); new WHO guidance on a popular contraceptive method… even for the initiated these, and many more, are tough topics.

Which is why we feel the ground is ripe for a fresh new crop of advocates and activists focused on HIV prevention research who will serve as a bridge between researchers and communities.

The HIV Vaccine Advocacy Research Group (VARG) is one of the groups working to intensify the flame of advocacy and activism for HIV vaccine research. This team of advocates for prevention research is focusing a local lens on global advocacy for HIV vaccines.

When the VARG met last month, members agreed to apply tactics such as in-person and online consultations, media engagement, training programs and other communication methods. With these tools, they hope to broaden public awareness, support a rich engagement of stakeholders and sustain broad support for HIV vaccine research.

The VARG is joining hands with AVAC to seek answers to the who, what, when, why and how of HIV prevention studies, analyzing the pipeline, and enquiring where trials fit into the bigger goal of finding an efficacious vaccine for everyone in need. The VARG will provide research groups with guidance on GPP in clinical trials, and monitor its application.

As a community of advocates we applaud inter-disciplinary research and call for more of it. We were happy to hear, at the recent HVTN conference, that HIV vaccine researchers are using lessons from cancer and autoimmune research; such partnerships are essential in the complex puzzle of finding an HIV vaccine.

A licensed safe, effective, affordable and accessible vaccine would fast-track us towards the goal of ending AIDS. It would also help to secure and sustain the massive gains from expanded access to existing treatment and prevention options.

Engaged communities that keep everyone on their toes are good for the field. We need more people to jump onboard the HIV-prevention activist ship.

VMMC: Progress to Date Gives Me Hope; Funding Commitments Give Me Chills!

Angelo is a Program Manager at AVAC.

[Editor’s Note: It’s been a busy few months. We are happy to finally share this blog, which includes references to events from last quarter, but reviews progress on VMMC and details the still-new framework to operationalize VMMC. Look for a forthcoming blog on VMMC commitments at the recent PEPFAR COP reviews.]

A presentation by the World Health Organization (WHO) earlier in the year brought good news about voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC), telling a story of lives saved—many, many lives. Facing a room full of VMMC experts, Dr. Buhle Ncube of WHO’s Africa Regional Office scrolled through a series of slides and highlighted a breathtaking number:

“More than 450,000 new HIV infections are projected to be averted by 2030 as a result of male circumcisions conducted in 14 priority countries even if programs stopped circumcising today.”

VMMC is a subject I care deeply about, and I spend many hours of work at AVAC on efforts to help accelerate its scale-up as part of combination prevention. These lives saved by VMMC represent a success and an opportunity. The opportunity had brought us to this meeting. Dr. Ncube’s presentation was part of the WHO’s February meeting to operationalize a new framework on VMMC.

Held in Durban, South Africa, the WHO brought together more than a hundred VMMC experts from fifteen priority countries (South Sudan was added recently) for the meeting. Attendees included Ministry of Health officials, WHO, UNAIDS, UNICEF and other UN staff, civil society, funders and implementers. The goals: to reflect on progress and impact to date; to discuss critical factors that explain the progress; and to explore new ways to address the challenges programs are facing. Funding for the VMMC programs in the priority countries was a big part of the conversation at the meeting, and unfortunately, I left the meeting with more questions than answers about aligning the new ambitious targets with real funds.

VMMC is one of the most powerful and cost-effective HIV prevention options currently available. Studies from 2006 showed that it reduces a man’s risk of acquiring HIV from a female partner by up to 60 percent, increasing to around 75 percent over time.

In 2007, WHO recommended that VMMC be scaled up in countries with high HIV prevalence and low levels of male circumcision. Although uptake was slow at the beginning, scale-up in most of the priority countries intensified as funders and implementers recognized that demand creation was as important as creating supply. UNAIDS and WHO set an ambitious goal of circumcising 80 percent of males in those countries by 2015, which would amount to about 20.3 million procedures, which would avert 3.4 million new HIV infections and save US$16.6 billion in future healthcare costs.

Participating in the deliberations at the Durban meeting gave me hope but also left me with chills. The successes show the power of this new tool, but scaling up this intervention depends on securing the political will to fund it. Those funds and the political will they require have not arrived.

Impressive progress
Although the original goal wasn’t realized, progress made is unprecedented in healthcare delivery—11.7 million males were circumcised by the end of 2015; increasing to more than 14 million by the end of 2016, about 69 percent of the original goal of 20.3 million procedures.

“The largest impact is from South Africa with an estimated 218,000 new HIV infections projected to be averted by 2030,” said Dr. Ncube. WHO further estimates that the goal of 80 percent coverage would avert another 470,000 new HIV infections by 2030 if VMMC rates can be sustained among 10- to 29-year-olds by 2020. This is worth taking a pause and celebrating!

Going forward with ambition
In 2016, UNAIDS released a new five-year strategy, and it contains an even more ambitious goal—27 million additional circumcisions by 2021. To align with this new strategy, WHO developed a new vision for scaling up VMMC called VMMC 2021. As civil society, we’ve often called for ambition, and we commend WHO for this boldness.

Wait a minute? Where is the funding to meet the ambitious goals?
This is what gives me chills! Achieving the new global target will require about five million procedures per year—double the current annual numbers. Moreover, the new VMMC 2021 framework calls for an alignment with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly Goal 3 (Good Health and Well-being); Goal 5 (Gender Equality); and Goal 17 (Partnerships).

“We must do things differently. We have to look at new institutional arrangements and widen global health architecture,” urged WHO’s Julia Samuelson.

This is a big shift that will definitely require a huge amount of resources. Yet the reality on the ground in countries is already dire. The truth is, ambitious targets that are not tied to funding are not very helpful. AVAC works with country-level coalitions to track both investment and progress towards national VMMC goals, and we see some consistent issues that impact progress toward targets. Each of these countries rely on PEPFAR as the major source of funding. In one place progress speeds along, in others it drags. Entire country programs like Malawi struggle widely. The task before us is not unachievable, but it’s huge.

So, where do we go from here?
As civil society, we welcome these new targets and approach. But, to meet them, more ambitious, more diverse and more predictable funding commitments are urgently needed from international donors and country governments. The new framework looks good on paper, but with no funding commitments to match those ambitions, we’re setting ourselves up to fail. And we can’t afford to fail.

So, I challenge PEPFAR to commit more resources for VMMC in the Country Operational Plans (not via PEPFAR Central Funds, which are highly unpredictibale, and subject to the discretion of bureacrats and politicians).

But we also need other donors to step up and join PEPFAR. So I also challenge country teams developing Global Fund concept notes to allocate more funds to VMMC. Sometimes civil society colleagues who are engaged in the Global Fund application process assume that VMMC has been fully funded by PEPFAR – but this is not the case.

Finally, I challenge country governments to take more ownership and commit more domestic finances to VMMC. Growing up, my teachers always told me that charity begins at home. Can we model this for the health of our people?

Slides and other key resources from the meeting available at this link.

Trump’s Budget Would Cut Promising Research and Live-Saving Interventions for HIV

AVAC’s Executive director Mitchell Warren today released the following statement on the proposed 2018 budget from the Trump Administration:

President Trump’s 2018 budget request delivered to Congress yesterday would be a disaster for people living with HIV and for those at risk of HIV infection here in the US and around the world.

The budget, entitled “A New Foundation for American Greatness,” would, in fact, devastate health, development and research programs that are hallmarks of America’s profound commitment to advancing knowledge and saving lives at home and abroad. AVAC stands in solidarity with many partner organizations in calling on Members of Congress to restate the long-standing bipartisan support for a comprehensive domestic and global AIDS response.

No HIV treatment, prevention or research program supported by the US government is left untouched in the proposed budget. Critical global and domestic health, development and poverty programs also face devastating cuts. Evidence has shown us that the HIV pandemic is driven by poverty, gender inequality and violence, as are virtually all disease outbreaks. The spectrum of proposed cuts in this budget create conditions where HIV and other health threats will thrive, as America’s superb research and implementation capacities are hobbled and unable to respond.

  • The US PEPFAR program and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria—to which the US is a major contributor—together provide the bulk of funding for HIV prevention, treatment and care programs in sub-Saharan Africa and other parts of the developing world. Both would receive significant cuts of approximately 15 percent in this proposed budget. These proposed reductions would have a disastrous and deadly impact on the fight to bring the AIDS epidemic to a conclusive end, as would cuts in related areas including family planning, reproductive health, and scientific research.
  • The proposed budget cuts USAID’s global health programs by a devastating 50 percent, and eliminates long-term investments in critical vaccine and microbicide research.
  • A $7 billion cut to the NIH includes a $1.1 billion cut to NIAID–almost a quarter of that Institute’s budget – which would likely have a devastating impact on HIV research overall, research and development of vaccines and other new prevention options, and scientific innovation.
  • Cuts to the CDC, the elimination of NIH’s Fogarty International Center, cuts to Medicaid and the Ryan White Program and other devastating and irrational cuts to the budget make it clear that this is nothing less than an assault on the health of citizens everywhere—in the US and abroad.

The budget proposal asserts the US government will continue treatment for “all current HIV/AIDS patients” under PEPFAR. PEPFAR has succeeded by increasing the number of people on treatment every year and providing critical funding for primary prevention programs. Increasing the number of people on treatment every year has contributed to the ambitious global goal of curbing the epidemic and of moving toward universal access to HIV treatment, a fundamental human right. Simply maintaining current treatment rolls is poor science and a poor investment of US resources. We know an increase in antiretroviral treatment (ART) programs with a parallel unstinting investment in additional HIV prevention programs, including voluntary medical male circumcision, condom programs and oral PrEP, will have significant impact on the pandemic. The proposed budget approach, which threatens prevention as well as treatment, will not.

The US government is the largest funder of HIV and global health programs and research. After years of prudent investment, we have seen amazing dividends in lives saved, families kept together, communities revitalized and economies boosted. Global health and HIV programs have enjoyed bipartisan support throughout the previous Bush and Obama Administrations. We call on the Congress to remember why these programs have been consistently supported and ensure they are reinstated in the 2018 budget.

Advocacy in Uncertain Times: A call to action

It’s almost here! HIV Vaccine Awareness Day (HVAD) is upon us. This Thursday will mark the day’s 20th anniversary and cap off AVAC’s month-long “vaccine immersion”. On Thursday, we will host the final webinar in our series, featuring Julie Ake of the US Military HIV Research Program. (Update: link to the recording.)

HVAD comes amidst a week when advocates for health and human rights are aghast at a new US guideline on expansion of the Global Gag Rule—a policy that is anti-woman and anti-public health, and that will now impact many more recipients of US funding. As AVAC states in a blog, we are committed to the rights and health of girls and women worldwide, and stand strong with our allies in this fight.

Our HVAD resources are designed for allies everywhere to use in the fight for rights-based, science-forward, sustainable solutions to the epidemic. They include our updated HVAD toolkit, which features our HVAD call to action, Advocacy in Uncertain Times, a new publication on HIV vaccine advocacy and priorities for the field—required reading for HIV prevention and vaccine advocates alike!

HVAD 2017 Toolkit

  • Advocacy in Uncertain Times: A call to action—AVAC’s report for HVAD on the state of the HIV vaccine research and development field, including key priorities for advancing research and sustaining support. (Click here to download all graphics from this report.)
  • HIV Vaccines: Key Messages for HVAD 2017—Bullet points on today’s pressing issues; great for informed audiences who need compelling outreach messages.
  • HIV Vaccines: An Introductory Fact Sheet—Part of AVAC’s basic fact sheet series, a two-pager of basic information and research updates; great for distribution to lay audiences.
  • HIV Vaccines: The Basics—Introductory PowerPoint slide set with basic concepts, an overview of research status and recent developments; great for use by research representatives and vaccine stakeholders for presenting information to wider audiences.
  • Vaccine Science for Busy Advocates: bNAbs—a one-pager reviewing highlights, next steps and key terms; great for lay audiences who are looking to understand complex technical issues.

Missed any of the previous webinars in the series? Visit www.avac.org/hvad for the slides and recordings.

And HVAD is active on social media this year! Follow the hashtags #HIVVaccineAware and #HVAD2017 on Twitter and Facebook for more messages and resources this HVAD.

At AVAC, we thank you for your work and partnership today and every day. We’re committed to ending the AIDS epidemic, and that means finding an HIV vaccine. We couldn’t do it without you.