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HIV Declines in Young Adults in South India. Rajesh Kumar, MD Prof. of Community Medicine. School of Public Health Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education & Research Chandigarh India dr.rajeshkumar@gmail.com. HIV Trends. Background…. Incidence is the BEST measure of trends
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HIV Declines in Young Adults in South India Rajesh Kumar, MD Prof. of Community Medicine School of Public Health Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education & Research Chandigarh India dr.rajeshkumar@gmail.com
Background… • Incidence is the BEST measure of trends • Prevalence among young people especially young married women is a good proxy to study trends in HIV incidence
Objectives Is there a change in HIV? Can biases explain the change?
HIV Sentinel Surveillance • 19981999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 ANC 94 94 112 174 201 272 396 STD 78 78 105 129 165 165 166 IDU 8 8 11 13 13 13 13 FSW - - 2 2 2 2 2 MSM - - 2 2 3 3 3 Total 180 180 232 320 384 455 670
Sentinel Surveillance Data analysed from 2000-2004 2,94,050 pregnant women at ANC clinics 58,790 men at STI clinics Age, Residence, Migration*, Education*, Some other sexually transmitted infections, Year, State and Site/Site Name*, * Not all years
<0.5% 0.5% to <1% 1% to <1.5% >=1.5% Regions of Analysis Based on state-level HIV-1 prevalence among ANC attendees Two regions of analysis: 1. ‘South’ 2. ‘North’ and other
Age-standardised HIV-1 prevalence in women attending ANC clinic Trends in HIV-1 in young adults in south India from 2000-2004: A Prevalence Study. The Lancet, 8 April 2006
Age-standardised HIV-1 prevalence in women aged 15–24 years attending ANC clinics by residence Trends in HIV-1 in young adults in south India from 2000-2004: A Prevalence Study. The Lancet, 8 April 2006
Age-standardised HIV-1 prevalence in women aged 15–24 years attending ANC clinics by migrant status Trends in HIV-1 in young adults in south India from 2000-2004: A Prevalence Study. The Lancet, 8 April 2006
Age-standardised HIV-1 prevalence in women aged 15–24 years attending ANC clinics by literacy Trends in HIV-1 in young adults in south India from 2000-2004: A Prevalence Study. The Lancet, 8 April 2006
Age-standardised HIV prevalence in women aged 15–24 years attending ANC monitored continuously and all sites Trends in HIV-1 in young adults in south India from 2000-2004: A Prevalence Study. The Lancet, 8 April 2006
Age-standardised HIV-1 prevalence in women aged 15–24 years attending ANC clinics in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Maharasthra, and Tamil Nadu Trends in HIV-1 in young adults in south India from 2000-2004: A Prevalence Study. The Lancet, 8 April 2006
Age-standardised HIV-1 prevalence in men aged 20–29 years attending STI clinics and in those with genital ulcers Trends in HIV-1 in young adults in south India from 2000-2004: A Prevalence Study. The Lancet, 8 April 2006
Sexual partners reported by general population in past 12 months Trends in HIV-1 in young adults in south India from 2000-2004: A Prevalence Study. The Lancet, 8 April 2006
Biases in ANC data • ANC coverage only 50% in North versus 80% in South BUT little change in key demographic variables in South from 2000-2004 • ANC captures young women better than older women • ANCs don’t capture men who use FSWs and are not married (perhaps ½ of all such men) • ANCs don’t capture FSWs
Summary 1/3 Decline in South • Not due to major changes in women who go to antenatal clinics • Not due to changes in sites chosen • Not due to mortality • Only changes in husband’s use of female sex work (less often or with condoms when done) is only plausible explanation • Consistent with increased peer intervention programs to reach sex workers starting about 1999 • Gaps exist in South however: esp Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh • Goal: 100% coverage of TI in all 115 districts
Summary No Change in North • Testing is not as complete: many districts don’t have a single site • Can exclude only MAJOR changes • It is early- only matter of time before increases occur • Peer interventions are limited • Rapid expansion of surveillance and scale up prevention in hot spots • North is not immune: complacency is dangerous
Implications • Innovations in routine surveillance as a cost-effective, sustainable and relevant research resource • Enhanced ANC surveillance include STIs and behavioural surveillance • Central biorepository of HIV+ and random % of HIV- • VCTC populations • Training of surveillance officers for better use of their own data • Develop biomarker based methods relevant to control • Incidence measures that work and are cheap • Risk stratification with combination of STI/questions • Understand FSW and male clients better • Size and distribution of FSW and male clients • Measure HIV and STIs in FSW and clients
Acknowledgement International Studies of HIV/AIDS (ISHA) All Investigators • P Jha D Phil, P Arora MSc, P Millson MD,N Dhingra MD, R S Remis MD Centre forGlobal Health Research,Public Health Sciences,University of Toronto, Toronto, M5C 1N8, Canada; • P Mony MD Institute of Population Healthand Clinical Research, St John’sNational Academy of HealthSciences, Bangalore, India • P Bhatia MD Osmania MedicalCollege, Hyderabad, India • M Bhattacharya PhD NationalInstitute of Health and FamilyWelfare, New Delhi, India • Prof N Nagelkerke PhD United Arab EmiratesUniversity, Al Ain,United Arab Emirates We thank NACO for providing access to the antenatal and STI data.