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TB, HIV and Drug Use The overview Colleen Daniels Stop TB Department World Health Organisation What is Tuberculosis (TB)? • TB is caused by infection with a bacteria – Mycobacterium tuberculosis • It is spread like the common cold through respiratory droplets in the air – Coughing, sneezing, talking, singing… • 1/3 of the world’s population are infected with TB (not active disease) • Bacteria lives dormant in the lung – latent TB infection • Only 5-10% actually develop TB disease during their lifetime (if HIV negative) • If HIV positive this increases to 10% every year What is HIV/TB? • One third of the 33 million people living with HIV is co-infected with TB • TB is a leading cause of death among people living with HIV • The majority of cases of tuberculosis in people living with HIV, occur in sub-Saharan Africa, where up to 80% of TB patients may be co-infected with HIV • Also very high levels of co-infection in certain high risk groups Global Burden of HIV/TB/IDU 2008 HIV • 33.2 million people living with HIV • 2.5 million new infections • 2.1 million people died of AIDS Tuberculosis • 9.4 million new cases • 1.3 million people died of TB • An additional 0.5 million HIV deaths due to TB IDU • 15.9 million people who inject drugs • 3 million HIV positive • Eastern Euro – 57% new HIV infections among IDUs (AIDS Epidemic Update 2009) (WHO- Update Global TB Control 2009) (AIDS Epidemic Update 2009) TB, HIV and injecting drug use - Overlap Injecting Drug Use People who use drugs have 10-30% increased risk of getting TB 15.9 million ? million 3 million ? TB 9.3 million 1.4 million HIV 33.3 million Vulnerable groups • Substance users – Injecting drug users – Other drug users – Alcohol excess – Smoking • Migrant populations – Economic – Social • Refugees • Children/young people • Prisoners • Indigenous populations Global response in 2008 • 1.4 million HIV positive TB cases – 500,000 people died of HIV associated TB • Only 1.4 million TB patients (out of 9m) tested for HIV – Of those HIV positive; 200,000 given CPT and 100,000 ART • Only 1.4 million PLHIV (out of 33.3m) screened for TB – Only 48,000 given IPT • 8 out of every 100 IDUs received OST Collaborative TB/HIV activities A. Establish the mechanism for collaboration • A.1. TB/HIV coordinating bodies • A.2. HIV surveillance among TB patient • A.3. TB/HIV planning • A.4. TB/HIV monitoring and evaluation B. To decrease the burden of TB in PLWHA • B.1. Intensified TB case finding • B.2. Isoniazid preventive therapy • B.3. TB infection control C. To decrease the burden of HIV in TB patients • C.1. HIV testing and counselling • C.2. HIV preventive methods • C.3. Cotrimoxazole preventive therapy • C.4. HIV/AIDS care and support • C.5. Antiretroviral therapy to TB patients. Power of advocacy HIV TB • HIV epidemic began 25 years ago • History of strong political advocacy/activism • Strong global awareness • Rapid test on finger prick or saliva in minutes, simple and accurate • TB thousands of years old • Recent adoption of advocacy/activism • TB a forgotten disease • Diagnostic test more than 120 years old, tedious & inaccurate • No new TB drugs for >40 years • Dozens of new drugs to treat HIV No more people living with HIV, dying of TB! Barriers • Advocacy/activism • Inadequate tools/lack of research • Weak health systems – human resources • Lack of collaboration and poor integration at patient level • No integration with harm reduction programs – No provision OST • Poor implementation of the Three I’s • Lack of social mobilization • HIV continues to spread Summary • TB, HIV and drug use closely linked • TB is preventable & curable in people living with HIV & drug users • Universal access means access to comprehensive TB and HIV prevention, care and treatment linked to services for people who use drugs • All stakeholders in TB, HIV and drug use need to work closely together to reduce the interrelated impact