Tracking HIV prevention @ AIDS 2014

The 20th International AIDS Conference begins Sunday, July 20 in Melbourne, Australia. We built out a special AIDS 2014 webpage that will help prevention advocates navigate the conference on-site and online.

On the page you will find:

  • A roadmap highlighting HIV prevention and implementation-related sessions taking place during the conference—available as a PDF and an Excel spreadsheet, sortable by prevention option, organizer, date and more.
  • A list of sessions and events that AVAC and its program partners are participating in (including our Exhibit Hall Booth—visit us at #301!).
  • Information on conference hubs, which provide long-distance access to the conference proceedings via session webcasts on the AIDS 2014 website and YouTube.
  • Details on a range of ways to follow via social media, including the new “Live Coverage” program from FHI 360 and IAS, AVAC’s social media coverage, videos from Mark King of My Fabulous Disease and more.
  • Links to sign up for official daily update emails.

We look forward to seeing some of you in Melbourne and are keen to work with all of you in the days, weeks and months after the conference to move the field forward.

Multipurpose Prevention Technologies for Reproductive Health

In May 2011, AVAC, USAID and CAMI convened a group of scientists to discuss and recommend strategies for accelerating the development of multipurpose prevention technologies for protection against unintended pregnancy, HIV and other STIs. This report includes the presentations and discussions from the meeting, as well as recommendations for next steps.

Facing Questions about Hormonal Contraceptives and HIV: What’s next in getting answers?

In this webinar we learned about and discussed proposed research to directly evaluate how different family planning methods might impact HIV risk.

Trial designs are actively being discussed and funding is being sought for such research—but there are many questions where advocates’ voices are needed: What should a trial look like? How can method mix (the range of available family planning options) be expanded for all women? What can be done to better integrate HIV and family planning in the meantime?

View the full webinar here

Press Release

AVAC applauds nomination of Dr. Deborah Birx as US Global AIDS Coordinator

New York – AVAC today issued the following statement from AVAC Executive Director Mitchell Warren on the nomination of Dr. Deborah Birx as the new Ambassador and US Global Coordinator:

“We at AVAC are extremely excited that President Obama has nominated an innovative and visionary person to lead the U.S. government’s fight against HIV/AIDS. The program, now 10 years old, is at a critical juncture, and Dr. Deborah Birx is the ideal leader for the work that lies ahead.

“Dr. Birx’s sterling career in both HIV prevention research and service delivery has always been characterized by passionate commitment to ambitious, innovative responses to the epidemic. Dr. Birx focused her early career on AIDS vaccine research, ultimately serving as Director of the US Military HIV Research Program as it initiated the RV 144 vaccine trial that showed in 2009 through modest efficacy that an AIDS vaccine was possible. We know that she is committed to the promise of combination prevention including the need for new tools such as an AIDS vaccine. More recently, as director of the Global AIDS Program at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, she has helped keep the focus on setting and attaining ambitious prevention and treatment goals in communities around the world hard hit by the HIV epidemic.

“As a member of AVAC’s board of directors, Dr. Birx has lent her experience and wisdom to our global advocacy work, and we know her as a keen advocate for a comprehensive response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic. We congratulate her on this nomination and look forward to continuing to work with her in the global fight to end AIDS.

“Dr. Birx will be assuming this role at a critical time for the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Her leadership will be essential in achieving the goals laid out in the PEPFAR Blueprint for Creating an AIDS-Free Generation.

“PEPFAR recently met an ambitious target for scaling up voluntary medical male circumcision, and it is continuing to expand available treatment slots for people living with HIV. But there is difficult work ahead for Dr. Birx and her team—specifically, it is essential to ensure that planned transitions from direct US aid to country ownership of programs do not proceed at the expense of quality services. PEPFAR must demonstrate leadership in ensuring that people not only start AIDS treatment, but remain on it, reaping the full benefits of effective viral suppression.

“It is also critical that PEPFAR continue to engage with civil society as it drafts and implements its plans for country-level work. Dr. Birx, with her established commitment to working with civil society, will be a terrific ally for this work going forward. Finally, the PEPFAR program needs a strong advocate at home, and looks to Dr. Birx to ensure that PEPFAR remains fully funded and ambitious in its targets for the next five years and beyond.

“Dr. Birx follows in the footsteps of two previous leaders who helped to create and mold a truly transformational global health program that the U.S. can be proud of, and we thank Ambassadors Mark Dybul and Eric Goosby for their leadership—and look forward to this next chapter of one of the greatest stories in public health.”

Contact:
Mitchell Warren, mitchell@avac.org, +1-914-661-1536
Kay Marshall, kay@avac.org, +1-347-249-6375

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About AVAC: Founded in 1995, AVAC is a non-profit organization that uses education, policy analysis, advocacy and a network of global collaborations to accelerate the ethical development and global delivery of AIDS vaccines, male circumcision, microbicides, PrEP and other emerging HIV prevention options as part of a comprehensive response to the pandemic.

The Tipping Point: Understanding a crucial milestone in the AIDS response

AVAC Playbook 2013–2014: Global goals and priorities

The AVAC’s Playbook is a concise look at global goals related to ten areas that are critical to ending the AIDS epidemic. The squares contain long-term goals; in the circles we have laid out priorities for 2014. Working with our partners, we develop and implement advocacy strategies to get us closer to these goals.

Press Release

AVAC urges HIV prevention research “reality check” in new report

Cape Town, South Africa, December 9, 2013 – In a report released today, AVAC calls on funders and researchers to capitalize on lessons learned from a range of recent HIV prevention trials with better problem solving, more critical thinking and coordinated action around large-scale human trials, faster roll out of proven options and ongoing research for new advances that women and men will want to use.

This year’s AVAC Report, entitled Research and Reality, pays particular attention to the needs of women and girls. Citing recent trials that failed to provide conclusive answers due to low use of products in the studies, the report lays out a broad and ambitious development agenda for female-initiated prevention options including vaginal gels, rings and other emerging biomedical strategies.

The new report also urges researchers, donors and implementers to step up plans for large-scale delivery of recently proven methods for women and men, including pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and non-surgical male circumcision devices. While pilot studies of these options are in progress, a lack of longer-range plans for program scale-up and roll out means that valuable time, and lives, could be lost.

“Prevention research has had both rough times and revolutionary breakthroughs in the past few years. It’s time to apply lessons from these experiences to work faster and smarter going forward,” said Mitchell Warren, AVAC executive director. “As advocates, we’re looking to make sure that new HIV prevention developments are turned into action—whether that’s delivering new options that work to the people who need them, or revising past assumptions based on trials that didn’t go as planned.”

“We need to keep focused on HIV prevention that’s effective, available and meets the needs of men and women throughout their lives,” Warren said.

Refocusing the Search for New Methods for Women

Research and Reality, released at the 17th International Conference on AIDS and STIs in Africa (ICASA), takes an in-depth, critical look at prevention research for women. There has been a positive, proof of concept finding that a vaginal gel can reduce women’s risk of HIV, as well as positive data on daily oral tenofovir-based PrEP in women. However, there have also been two trials in which participants did not actually use the options being tested regularly enough to answer the study questions.

In the report, AVAC offers recommendations and analysis to move beyond competing interpretations of these data. This is the first advocacy document to provide a full picture of what the trials do and do not reveal about the future of female-initiated prevention. It identifies clear steps to take to address issues from past trials and a core set of questions that need to be answered through strategic research going forward.

“It would be completely unacceptable to throw up our hands and say we don’t know what women want,” said Warren. “With women representing half of the global HIV epidemic, it’s both a practical and a moral imperative to keep up the search for new methods that women can control and want to use.”

“Recent trial results may be puzzling, but one thing we know for sure is that many women at risk want and need new ways to protect themselves from HIV,” said Nono Eland, chairperson of the Women’s Sector of the South African National AIDS Council (SANAC). “The prevention revolution continues. Earlier this year, participants at the SANAC Women’s Sector biennial summit called for better investment in prevention for women. We called for women to be meaningfully involved at all stages—from planning to distribution of HIV prevention products that are developed for us and reiterated the need for prevention research literacy for communities.”

To help resolve questions and challenges about women’s prevention options, Research and Reality recommends that researchers and trial sponsors:

  • Continue to explore and measure methods to improve adherence.
  • Conduct additional qualitative research to better understand women’s reasons for enrolling in a trial and using (or not using) a study product.
  • Use innovative trial designs that would select trial participants who are most likely to adhere to a product regimen so efficacy can be determined – if the trial shows efficacy, bridging studies should be designed to examine how the strategy might work among more diverse populations

“When conventional approaches to science are not working, it’s time to break with convention,” said Dr. Helen Rees, Executive Director of the Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute in South Africa and a member of AVAC’s board of directors. “We urgently need to identify a range of prevention options that can work for women – and then we need to know which options will work best for which women.”

Research and Reality also provides four overarching recommendations on issues that lie at the intersection of research goals and real-world conditions.

  • Launch complex trials to answer complex questions – Clinical trials remain the only way to answer the most important scientific questions in HIV prevention. Researchers and funders must continue to launch new trials despite the challenges, complexities and costs. This is especially true for AIDS vaccines, as well as to clarify the effect of hormonal contraception on HIV risk, where research is critical and must proceed.
  • Plan for roll out beyond pilot projects – Pilot projects are an important first step toward ensuring that promising research results translate into real impact on people’s lives, but pilot projects alone will not end the AIDS epidemic. To realize their full potential, interventions such as daily oral PrEP and non-surgical devices for voluntary medical male circumcision need to be adequately resourced, ramped up, and included in national HIV/AIDS implementation plans.
  • Invest and innovate in virologic suppression – In addition to the life-saving benefits of antiretroviral therapy as treatment for people living with HIV, research shows that ARV treatment can dramatically reduce the risk of HIV transmission to others. But treatment works in this way only when it effectively suppresses virus in the body to very low levels. To achieve and sustain HIV suppression and realize the full preventive potential of treatment, it is critical to invest in treatment adherence programs, new antiretroviral therapies, therapeutic vaccines and a cure.
  • Align programs, models and funding to stay on track to end AIDS – Countries are developing HIV prevention plans and targets based on modeling that does not fully account for realities on the ground. Models are essential, but they need to be designed with built-in feedback loops – pulling in surveillance data and other information about the impact of prevention programs, so that results can be improved quickly over time.

The new Research and Reality recommendations build on the AVAC Playbook, a long-term agenda for global HIV prevention efforts first issued in 2011. AVAC assesses and reports on the most critical next steps for the development and delivery of new prevention options each year.

Contact:
Mitchell Warren, mitchell@avac.org, +1-914-661-1536
Kay Marshall, kay@avac.org, +1-347-249-6375

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About AVAC: Founded in 1995, AVAC is a non-profit organization that uses education, policy analysis, advocacy and a network of global collaborations to accelerate the ethical development and global delivery of AIDS vaccines, male circumcision, microbicides, PrEP and other emerging HIV prevention options as part of a comprehensive response to the pandemic. The full report, AVAC Report 2013: Research and Reality, is available at www.avac.org/report2013.

The Tipping Point

One way to measure progress in fighting AIDS is to compare the number of new HIV infections with the increase in HIV positive people on antiretroviral therapy (ART) over a given time period. An AIDS epidemic reaches its “tipping point” when the number of annual new HIV infection falls below the annual increase in patients starting ART. Coverage matters. A first milestone is treating approximately two thirds of people in need in a given country. Once that level is reached, countries and advocates can track progress to the tipping point.

Ending AIDS Gamechangers

From the Ending AIDS report, a joint partnership between AVAC and amfAR. Visit www.endingaids.org for more information.

Achieving the End: One Year and Counting

In AVAC Report 2012, Achieving the End: One Year and Counting we’ve identified five priorities for action.