Sardashti Sara, Samaei Mehrnoosh, Firouzeh Mona Mohammadi, Mirshahvalad Seyed Ali, Pahlaviani Fatemeh Golsoorat, SeyedAlinaghi SeyedAhmad
Sara Sardashti, Mehrnoosh Samaei, Mona Mohammadi Firouzeh, Seyed Ali Mirshahvalad, Fatemeh Golsoorat Pahlaviani, SeyedAhmad SeyedAlinaghi, Iranian Research Center for HIV/AIDS, Iranian Institute for Reduction of High Risk Behaviors, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran 14-19-733141, Iran.
World J Virol. 2015 May 12;4(2):134-41. doi: 10.5501/wjv.v4.i2.134.
New World Health Organization guidelines recommend the initiation of antiretroviral treatment (ART) for asymptomatic patients with CD4+ T-cell counts of ≤ 500 cells/mm(3). Substantial reduction of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission is addressed as a major public health outcome of this new approach. Middle East and North Africa (MENA), known as the area of controversies in terms of availability of comprehensive data, has shown concentrated epidemics among most of it's at risk population groups. Serious challenges impede the applicability of new guidelines in the MENA Region. Insufficient resources restrict ART coverage to less than 14%, while only one fourth of the countries had reportable data on patients' CD4 counts at the time of diagnosis. Clinical guidelines need to be significantly modified to reach practical utility, and surveillance systems have not yet been developed in many countries of MENA. Based on available evidence in several countries people who inject drugs and men who have sex with men are increasingly vulnerable to HIV and viral hepatitis, while their sexual partners - either female sex workers or women in monogamous relationships with high-risk men - are potential bridging populations that are not appropriately addressed by regional programs. Research to monitor the response to ART among the mentioned groups are seriously lacking, while drug resistant HIV strains and limited information on adherence patterns to treatment regimens require urgent recognition by health policymakers. Commitment to defined goals in the fight against HIV, development of innovative methods to improve registration and reporting systems, monitoring and evaluation of current programs followed by cost-effective modifications are proposed as effective steps to be acknowledged by National AIDS Programs of the countries of MENA Region.
世界卫生组织新指南建议,对于无症状且CD4+ T细胞计数≤500个细胞/立方毫米的患者,应开始抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)。大幅减少人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)传播被视为这一新方法的一项主要公共卫生成果。中东和北非(MENA)地区在全面数据的可得性方面存在争议,该地区大多数高危人群中都出现了集中流行的情况。严重的挑战阻碍了新指南在中东和北非地区的适用性。资源不足使得ART覆盖率低于14%,而在诊断时,只有四分之一的国家有患者CD4计数的可报告数据。临床指南需要大幅修改以达到实际效用,而且中东和北非许多国家尚未建立监测系统。根据几个国家的现有证据,注射毒品者和男男性行为者越来越容易感染HIV和病毒性肝炎,而他们的性伴侣——无论是女性性工作者还是与高危男性保持一夫一妻关系的女性——都是潜在的桥梁人群,但区域项目并未对其进行适当处理。严重缺乏对上述人群中ART反应进行监测的研究,而耐药HIV毒株以及关于治疗方案依从模式的信息有限,这需要卫生政策制定者紧急关注。建议致力于实现抗击HIV的既定目标、开发创新方法以改善登记和报告系统、对当前项目进行监测和评估,随后进行具有成本效益的调整,这些都是中东和北非地区各国国家艾滋病项目应认可的有效步骤。