Title: Diapositive 1
1Challenges and opportunities for providing ARVs
to IDUs and promoting adherence
Bruno Spire, INSERM U912 AIDES, France
2Background
- HAART scale up is progressing worldwide, but IDUs
are the most excluded from HIV care - In Eastern European and Central Asia, IDUs
account for more than 80 of HIV cases, but only
14 of them are receiving HAART. - In South and South-East Asia, IDUs account for
more than 20 of HIV cases in 5 countries, but
only 1.8 of them are receiving HAART. - Structural and individual barriers to access can
be identified
3Structural barriers of access to HAART for IDUs
- Providers perceptions about patients adherence
- Guidelines for treatment provision
- Lack of entry points for comprehensive care
- Criminalisation of drug use
- Lack of acknowledgeable civil society in the
field of HIV or drug use
4Individual barriers of access to HAART and
continuity of care for IDUs
- Social vulnerability
- Psychiatric co-morbidity
- Ongoing drug use
- Depression
- Fear of experience with side-effects
Role of sustained adherence to assure HAART
efficacy
5Impact of non-adherence on HIV clinical
progression (MANIF 2000 cohort, n 243 IDUs
receiving HAART)
1.00
Adherent patients
0.75
Non-adherent patients
0.50
0.25
Time (months)
0.00
0
20
40
60
80
6Specific risk factors for reduced adherence in
IDUs
- Ongoing drug injection is consistently associated
with non adherence - Elevated alcohol consumption and cocaine use
predict non adherence behaviours - In individuals who have given up injection,
social vulnerability is the major predictor of
non-adherence - Prevalence of depression is high among drug users
and represents an additional barrier to adherence
- BOUHNIK 2004, PALEPU 2004, STEIN 2000
- LUCAS 2002, PALEPU 2004, ARNSTEN 2002
- BOUHNIK 2004, PALEPU 2004, STEIN 2000
- TURNER 2003, KLEEBERGER 2004
7Methadone and adherence
- Methadone is effective in reducing injection
- Regular participation in Methadone programs is
associated with uptake of and adherence to HAART - Non adherence to HAART in methadone patients is
comparable to adherence to other chronic
therapies - When methadone can reduce drug use, it can assure
high adherence to HAART and good HAART outcomes - Directly administered Methadone can assure
sustained adherence
8Buprenorphine and adherence
- Buprenorphine is as effective as methadone in
reducing injection - Buprenorphine has no negative impact on
virological response - Adherence to HAART in buprenorphine patients is
comparable to adherence in abstinent patients - Methadone and buprenorphine can both assure
adherence to HAART in stabilized patients
9Interventions for structural barriers to access
- Training of physicians involved in care for HIV
and IDUs using international guidelines - Staff and services need to be user-friendly,
non-judgmental, and knowledgeable about IDU,
HIV/AIDS, and related clinical issues - Need for integrating treatment for HIV, drug
dependence, psychiatric comorbidity, social
services and medical treatment (one-site model
when possible)
10Interventions for individuals barriers to access
and adherence in IDUs
- The importance of co-treating depression to
enhance adherence - Management of self-reported side effects and pain
- Adherence counselling possible involvement of
peers and family for support - DOT can enhance adherence but can limit social
rehabilitation and foster stigmatisation
(prisons)
11Role of OST
- OST can reinforce patients social support
networks and increase social stabilisation and
access to care - The need to control withdrawal symptoms by OST
can facilitate a routine approach that can be
applied to HAART intake - OST makes HAART more acceptable as OST is already
a long term treatment - OST may reduce stigma against IDUs
12Conclusions
- Access to HAART cannot be advocated without
access to OST - Respect of human rights and equity of access
principles should be integrated in public health
policies - It is important to identify the most appropriate
model of care for delivering OST and HAART - Doing with IDUs and not for IDUs
-