|
This
commentary was published to accompany the paper "HIV
infection and risk behaviours among young gay and bisexual men
in Vancouver" in the January 11, 2000 issue of the Canadian
Medical Association Journal 2000; 162(1):52-3.
HIV: The Millennium Bug
Brian C. Willoughby
Dr. Willoughby is a family physician in
Vancouver, a consultant to the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS
and a former member of the National Advisory Council on AIDS.
See also:
Highlights
of this issue [Introduction]
HIV infection
and risk behaviours among young gay and bisexual men in Vancouver [Paper]
And the nominees are...
By the end of 1999 hundreds of "millennial" appellations
were being sprouted. Should the field of microbiology have been
included? Throughout the second millennium epidemics claimed vast
numbers of lives - the bubonic plague killed 50 million people
in the Middle Ages, and the influenza epidemic took 20?40 million
lives in the years immediately following World War I. [1] But as modern medicine has produced
ever-greater life expectancy in almost all areas of the world,
few imagined a modern-day epidemic that would so significantly
reverse this trend. Such has been the impact of HIV/AIDS around
the world, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa.
In this issue, Steffanie A. Strathdee and colleagues [2] present data on HIV
infection and associated high-risk behaviours among young gay
and bisexual men in Vancouver. Their data serve to remind
us that the monumental task of combatting this scourge is far
from finished. Indeed, any complacency engendered by decreasing
rates of HIV seroconversion, new AIDS cases and AIDS-related deaths
must be challenged. Not only is the seroconversion rate unacceptably
high in the authors' bailiwick of the relatively well-educated
gay male community in a rich industrialized country, but the greater
tragedy has yet to unfold completely among the poor and uneducated
people in Africa and South Asia. Just as the effects of HIV/AIDS
are greater in the poorer nations, the same issues of poverty
and lack of education emerge as risk factors in the study by Strathdee
and colleagues.
Since its identification by Western scientists in 1981, AIDS
has claimed over 13 million lives. [3] At least twice as many people are
currently HIV-positive, most of them in impoverished countries
with little hope of sharing in the pharmacological advances that
are so readily available in Europe and North America. These grim
numbers warrant HIV's nomination as the "millennium bug."
Remarkable advances in both our knowledge of HIV infection
and effective therapies have produced dramatic reductions in the
rates of AIDS and AIDS-related deaths. Yet, as is speculated by
Strathdee and colleagues, these same successes may serve to increase
the spread of HIV in their cohort. In the wealthier nations, they
may also lull society into viewing HIV infection as a manageable
chronic illness, with a reduced sense of urgency to continue funding
research, patient support programs, and education and preventive
strategies. As noted by the authors, this would be an unwise philosophy
to espouse when evidence exists of increasing rates of seroconversion.
In addition, therapies for HIV infection have high failure rates,
whether because the drugs have failed or because individual patients
have not adhered to the complex regimens.
In 1996 the world focused on Vancouver as the Xth International
Conference on HIV/AIDS reported some of the best news heard yet,
with the advent of highly active therapies and enthusiastic discussions
of eradicating HIV. Later emerged horrendous reports of an epidemic
rampant among injection drug users in that city. And now, Strathdee
and colleagues warn that, even in Vancouver's young gay and bisexual
male population, a group actively targeted over the last dozen
years for risk reduction, both high-risk behaviours and new cases
of HIV infection are occurring at an alarming rate.
The spectre of hospitals overflowing with HIV-positive patients
afflicted by life-threatening opportunistic infections and diseases
is indeed real. As the epidemic matures in the community of injection
drug users, these individuals will probably need hospital care.
Yet, adherence to complex regimens is less likely among poor people
and injection drug users than among the highly motivated subjects
in clinical trials, and the outcome will be less effective viral
suppression. This may indeed overlap the resurgence of illness
among other HIV-positive patients in whom therapies have failed.
So, as we begin the new year, let us not forget the nominees
for millennium bug: bubonic plague, influenza, Y2K and HIV. One
in particular seems destined to confront us well into the future.
Competing interests: Dr.
Willoughby owns stock in Biochem Pharma, has received speaker
fees and education grants from Abbott Laboratoties, Agouron Pharmaceuticals,
Biochem Pharma, Bristol Myers Squibb, Dupont Pharma, Glaxo Wellcome
Inc., Hoffmann-La Roche, Mercke Frosst and Pharmacia & Upjohn,
and has received travel assistance to attend meetings from Bristol
Myers Squibb, Glaxo Wellcome Inc., Hoffmann-La Roche and Merck Frosst.
REFERENCES:
1. Wintrobe, et al, editors. Harrison's principles of internal
medicine. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company; 1970.
(return to text)
2. Strathdee SA, Martindale SL, Cornelisse PGA, Miller ML, Craib
KJP, Schechter MT, O'Shaughnessy MV, Hogg RS. HIV infection and
risk behaviours among young gay and bisexual men in Vancouver.
CMAJ 2000;162(1):21-5.
(return to text)
3. O'Rourke M, editor. UNAIDS December 1998 AIDS
Epidemic Update, in AIDS Clinical Care. Waltham (MA): Massachusetts
Medical Society Publishing Division; 1999.
(return to text)
© 2000 Canadian Medical Association
or its licensors.
For more information, contact:
Bonnie Devlin
Vanguard Project Coordinator
608 - 1081 Burrard Street
Vancouver, BC, Canada, V6Z 1Y6
Tel: (604)806-8306
Fax: (604)806-9044
|