Department of Global Health.
Department of Medicine.
Curr Opin HIV AIDS. 2019 Sep;14(5):354-365. doi: 10.1097/COH.0000000000000569.
The aim of this review is to examine the emerging results from the HIV universal test and treat (UTT) cluster-randomized trials in sub-Saharan Africa, discuss how expanding access to HIV clinical services is likely to reshape the arc of HIV epidemics, and consider implications for HIV prevention and control strategies in the coming decade.
The effect of universal HIV testing followed by immediate antiretroviral treatment (ART) on community-level HIV incidence remains unclear upon completion of five randomized trials. Only two of the four trials that measured HIV incidence found significant reductions in community-level incidence. Even in these trials, HIV incidence remained above levels required for epidemic control (≤1 case per 1000 person-years) despite high levels of ART coverage and viral suppression. These findings may indicate that community-delivered HIV services are not reaching the high-frequency transmitters who sustain HIV epidemics and are likely members of marginalized or hard to engage core groups.
With expanded access to HIV services in sub-Saharan Africa, HIV epidemics are transitioning from hyperendemic to declining/endemic epidemic phases, characterized increasingly by the reconcentration of HIV in marginalized or hard to engage core groups. To move toward epidemic control, novel HIV service delivery models and technologies are needed to engage those who continue to drive HIV incidence in this new epidemic phase.
目的综述:本综述旨在探讨撒哈拉以南非洲国家中正在开展的 HIV 普遍检测和治疗(UTT)集群随机对照试验的新结果,讨论扩大获得 HIV 临床服务的机会如何重塑 HIV 流行的轨迹,并考虑在未来十年中对 HIV 预防和控制策略的影响。
最近发现:五项随机试验完成后,普遍 HIV 检测后立即进行抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)对社区层面 HIV 发病率的影响仍不清楚。在测量 HIV 发病率的四项试验中,只有两项发现社区层面发病率有显著降低。即使在这些试验中,尽管 ART 覆盖率和病毒抑制率很高,但 HIV 发病率仍高于控制流行所需的水平(≤每 1000 人年 1 例)。这些发现可能表明,社区提供的 HIV 服务并未覆盖维持 HIV 流行的高频传播者,这些人可能是边缘化或难以接触的核心人群的成员。
总结:随着撒哈拉以南非洲地区获得 HIV 服务的机会增加,HIV 流行正在从高度流行过渡到下降/流行阶段,其特征是 HIV 越来越集中在边缘化或难以接触的核心人群中。为了实现流行控制,需要新的 HIV 服务提供模式和技术来接触那些在新的流行阶段继续推动 HIV 发病率的人。