Abstract

The World Health Organization (WHO) has published a guideline for the management of individuals with advanced HIV disease (AHD) to reduce HIV-related deaths. The guideline consists of a package of recommendations including interventions to prevent, diagnose and treat common opportunistic infections, including tuberculosis (TB), cryptococcosis and severe bacterial infections, along with rapid initiation of antiretroviral treatment and enhanced adherence support. Currently no clear targets exist for these key interventions. Emerging programmatic data from Uganda, Tanzania and Nigeria suggest that an estimated 80% of eligible people continue to miss the recommended cryptococcal or TB testing, highlighting the remaining challenges to the effective implementation of WHO-recommended AHD packages of care in real-world resource-limited settings. The absence of mortality indicators for the leading causes of HIV-related deaths, because of the lack of mechanisms to ascertain cause of death, has had a negative impact on establishing interventions to reduce mortality. We suggest that setting 95-95-95 targets for CD4 testing, cryptococcal antigen and TB testing, and treatment that are aligned to the WHO AHD package of care would be a step in the right direction to achieving the greater goal of the WHO End TB strategy and the proposed new strategy to end cryptococcal meningitis deaths. However, these targets will only be achieved if there is healthcare worker training, expanded access to bedside point-of-care diagnostics for hospitalised patients and those in outpatient care who meet the criteria for AHD, and health systems strengthening to minimise delays in initiating the WHO-recommended therapies for TB and cryptococcal disease.

Highlights

  • In 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a guideline for the management of individuals with advanced HIV disease (AHD), as part of the strategy to reduce HIV-related deaths.[1]

  • This guideline outlines a package of care for persons with AHD and includes interventions to prevent, diagnose and treat common opportunistic infections (OIs), including tuberculosis (TB), cryptococcosis and severe bacterial infections, along with rapid initiation of antiretroviral treatment (ART) and enhanced adherence support

  • Such targets should include the proportion of persons accessing CD4 testing, persons with a CD4 count of < 200 cells/μL who are screened for TB and cryptococcal disease, and co-infected persons subsequently started on therapy (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

In 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a guideline for the management of individuals with advanced HIV disease (AHD) (defined as having a CD4 count of < 200 cells/μL or HIV stage 3 or 4 disease in adults and adolescents or children younger than 5 years), as part of the strategy to reduce HIV-related deaths.[1].

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