Title: Where do STDs fit in the big scheme
1Where do STDs fit in the big scheme?
- Analogies to and lessons learned from the 2003
IOM report Microbial Threats to
Health-Emergence, Detection and Response - Follows 1992 IOM report Emerging Infections
Microbial Threats to Health in the United States
2Post-marked for Terror
3Popular Media Coverage
Image source WHO
4Leading Infectious Causes of Death Worldwide
5Recent Microbial Threats
6Microbial Threats to Health
- Identify, assess factors in emergence of ID
- Assess capacity of US to respond to ID
- Identify domestic and international public health
actions to strengthen detection, prevention, and
response to microbial threats to human health - Global emphasis
7Convergence of Factors
- Many factors, interrelated, converge to create
perfect storm scenario. The microbial perfect
storm threatens to recur because the factors
persist with few prospects for change. - Applies equally well to STDs!
8Factors in emergence STDs
- Microbial adaptation, change
- Changing ecosystems, land use
- Human demographics and behavior
- International travel and commerce
- Technology and industry
- Breakdown in public health
- Poverty and social inequality
- War and famine
- Lack of political will
- Intent to harm
9The Human Population Explosion
Source UN, 1999
10International Tourists Arrivals
WTO, 2002
11World Urbanization Trends
Source UN, 1999
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13Recommendations
- Think globally
- Improve surveillance
- Improve public health infrastructure
- Educate the public and workforce
- Develop vaccines and drugs
- Diminish inappropriate drug use
- Use better point of care diagnostics
- Create Interdisciplinary ID centers
14Enhanced Global Capacity
- The US should enhance global ID response
capacity, focusing on the developing world best
help by promoting training and local
infrastructure - Since many STDs are more prevalent in less
developed world, recommendation applies equally
well to STDs! - There are Some international CDC and NIH
Fogarty programs but there are many needs and
opportunities in this arena
15Improve global surveillance
- The US should take a leadership role in
implementing a comprehensive system of
surveillance for global infectious diseases, that
builds on the current global capacity of
infectious disease monitoring - Very similar to 1997 recommendation in IOM report
for CDC to lead national effort to improve
surveillance for STDs
16Bureaucratic intrusions?
17Rebuilding public health capacity
- Federal and state authorities should continue the
effort to rebuild and sustain public health
capacity to respond to ID - Requires funds for salaries
- On the money as relates to public STD clinics,
local and state HD needs - BT funds have helped-sustainable?
18Antibiotic overuse is a problem that must be
addressed
- Problem is serious and is getting worse
- Resistant clones emerge and spread globally eg
pneumococci - Reduced availability of key drugs is occurring
coincident with emerging resistance eg, cefixime
withdrawn as ciproR GC appear
19Cipro resistance-a growing problem
- Prevalence over 90 in China and 60-70 in Korea
and Japan only slightly less in Vietnam and
Philippines - 10-20 in Hawaii
- 2-3 in California-but much higher in certain
cities in CA LA, SF 13-20 - Pockets in particular US cities of 10-20, and
growing Mass 13, S Wang - Cefixime less susceptible emerging too
20Promote antimicrobial sensitivity testing
- Educate the public and health care workers
- Develop and deploy better cheap sensitive
specific rapid point of care tests to allow
rational use of antimicrobials - Detection of resistance is a problem in GC
because of increasing reliance on NAATs
21Is decreased inappropriate antibiotic use
possible?
- Decreased use in developed world may make little
difference if over the counter and indiscriminate
use continues in much of the less developed
world, which has no funds for physicians,
diagnostics or pharmacies - Clearly pertinent to STDs where resistance
typically occurs where over the counter use is
great eg, GC in East Asia, H ducreyi in Africa
and E Asia
22Use of diagnostics
- Public health agencies and professional societies
should develop and promulgate guidelines for
intensive application of existing and new
diagnostic modalities - Inferred syndromic management may be cheaper in
the short run but more costly in the long run - Should we reexamine emphasis on STD syndromic
management algorithms?
23Need for new drugs
- US Secretary of HHS should ensure formulation,
implementation of strategy to develop new
antimicrobials, and for an adequate supply of
existing antimicrobials - Big pharma is abandoning the antibiotic
development business shortages exist - What oral drug will replace cipro and cefixime
for GC? Are we really going to use gentamicin or
amikacin for GC?
24Ensure a vaccine supply
- Secretary of HHS working with Secretaries of
Defense, and of Homeland Security should ensure
the implementation of a national vaccine strategy
for protecting the the US population from endemic
and emerging microbial threats, as well as
potential BT attacks - HHS, USAID, and US Secretary of State should work
with public and private partners here and abroad
to help developing countries with their vaccine
needs
25Vaccines-shortages
- Only 4 manufacturers among big pharma, only 2 in
US, down sharply from past - Expensive to develop-ca 800M for a new vaccine
- Litigation a post development expense
- Price controlled market for many due to
government purchases - No easy fix-but time for action
26Vaccines for STDs?
- HIV slow progress
- Human papilloma viruses promising results for
HPV 16/18 pseudovirion vaccine - HSV possible efficacy of recombinant subunit
vaccine in women - Little public or private interest in others
although C trachomatis, T pallidum and GC
vaccines are within possibility
27Can we see the future?
- It seems obvious that treatment of GC is going to
be a bigger problem before too long. If
cephalosporins go, there will be no oral drugs
left. History teaches that cephalosprin
resistance will emerge. - Use of injectable aminoglycosides as a mainstay
has a lot of problems
28Why meningococci but not gonococci
- Huge effort in Europe especially to develop
meningococcal vaccine - Very little effort to develop GC vaccine
- Animal model now exists
- No reason that strategies that work for mening
should not work for GC
29Comprehensive research agenda
- NIH should develop a comprehensive research
agenda for ID, in collaboration with CDC, DOD, US
Dept Energy, NSF, academia and industry - Implied research agenda is sometimes focused too
much on the scare of the moment, influenced by
congressional mandates that make little sense,
and leaves out certain crucial areas
30Comprehensive research agenda for STDs
- Good news NIH has continued to defend and fund
research centers and training grants CDC is
expanding its research program on an NIH-like
model - Bad news advocacy groups such as Traditional
Values Coalition target behavioral research on
sexuality-even though this was cited as key need
in 1997 report
31Behavioral Research-Difficult but Necessary
- Internet use and syphilis among MSM in San
Francisco MMWR 52 1229, 12/19/2003 - Internet as a means for partner notification-Los
Angeles MMWR 53 129, 2/20/2004
32Why do some men engage in risky behaviors?
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37What is the funding future for STD programs?
- Funds are not likely to increase-we are in a huge
budget deficit. Budgets could be pinched. - Programs could be brought under larger umbrellas
in name of cost efficiency. - Increased multitasking may be expected-clinic
personnel assigned to non-STD tasks career
officers moved to other jobs as members of
officer corps of PHS
38Interdisciplinary Centers?
- STI-TM-CRCs being renewed focus on interacting
themes, prevention-but is this enough? - Opportunity for broader scale of research,
bringing together public health, medical
anthroplogy, behavioral scientists, economics,
epidemiology, as well as clinicians and basic
scientists
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41There are reasons to hope
- Ease of recruiting volunteers to HPV and HSV
vaccine studies suggests great public acceptance
if the experimental vaccines are efficacious and
cost effective. - HPV vaccine will be marketed as a cancer vaccine
- Common sense will rule, public will demand
prevention and information
42Hope continued
- Eventually we will join the rest of the Western
world in accepting need to investigate and
discuss sexuality and sexual behaviors - Hope that correlations of certain STDs HHV-8
with prostate cancer JID189, 15-20, 2004 is
correct and points the way to STDs as cause of
prostate cancer.
43A Seat at the Table