- HATIP 2008
- HATIP 2007
- HATIP 2006
- HATIP 2005
- HATIP 2004
- HATIP #22, 23rd January 2004
- HATIP #23, 6th February 2004
- HATIP #24, 1st March 2004
- HATIP #25, 19th March 2004
- HATIP #26, 26th March 2004
- HATIP #27, 29th April 2004
- HATIP #28, 20th May 2004
- HATIP #29, 11th June 2004
- HATIP #30, 6th July 2004
- HATIP #31, 5th August 2004
- HATIP#32, 20th August 2004
- HATIP #33, 3rd September 2004
- HATIP #34, 13th September 2004
- HATIP #35, 3rd October 2004
- HATIP #36, 3rd November 2004
- HATIP #37, 29th November 2004
- HATIP #38, 22nd December 2004
- HATIP 2003
HATIP 2004
To view the 2004 archive, please select a choose an issue from the list below.
HATIP #22, 23rd January 2004
HATIP #23, 6th February 2004
HATIP #24, 1st March 2004
HATIP #25, 19th March 2004
HATIP #26, 26th March 2004
HATIP #27, 29th April 2004
HATIP #28, 20th May 2004
HATIP #29, 11th June 2004
HATIP #30, 6th July 2004
HATIP #31, 5th August 2004
HATIP#32, 20th August 2004
HATIP #33, 3rd September 2004
HATIP #34, 13th September 2004
HATIP #35, 3rd October 2004
HATIP #36, 3rd November 2004
HATIP #37, 29th November 2004
HATIP #38, 22nd December 2004
HATIP #21, 1st January 2004
News headlines
A selection of news stories which have appeared since December 19 2003.
More evidence that earlier treatment provides greatest benefit forchildren with HIV
In HIV positive children, starting antiretroviral therapy at younger ages and before severe immune suppression occurs appears to promote better CD4 cell recovery, according to an American study published in the December 20th edition of The Lancet.
HAART just as effective in HIV/TB coinfected patients
HIV-positive patients with active tuberculosis (TB), who receive anti-TB therapy and HAART are just as likely as HAART-treated HIV-positive patients without TB to benefit from antiretroviral therapy, according to a Taiwanese study published in the December edition of AIDS. The investigators also found that the TB patients were at no greater risk of developing AIDS developing illnesses or dying than the non-TB patients were.
TB case detection likely to prove more effective than HAART in limiting TB spread
Detecting and treating cases of active tuberculosis in countries with high HIV rates is more effective at reducing TB incidence and death than providing HAART, treating latent TB infection, or preventing HIV infection, according to a statistical model developed by researchers at the University of Southampton and the World Health Organization and published in the November 21st edition of AIDS.
TB recurrence risk not reduced by longer therapy, or TB and HAART together
Providing concurrent anti-HIV and tuberculosis (TB) therapy, or TB
treatment of greater than standard duration does not reduce the incidence of TB recurrence, according to a study conducted in Taiwan and published in the December 1st edition of the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes. The investigators also found a higher recurrance rate than that found in a meta-analysis of studies published earlier this year in Clinical Infectious Diseases.
Looking forward to 2004: microbicide and ARV prevention prospects
Several would-be microbicides are due for large-scale clinical trials in 2004, testing two basic ideas about how to protect women from HIV through vaginal sex. More than 50 products are in the pipeline although there will never be funding to test them all fully. Increasingly, serious issues will have to be resolved concerning the process by which products are evaluated and, it is hoped, can be made available to all who need them.
Looking forward to 2004: HIV vaccine prospects
In 2003, the first preventive vaccines to go into full scale trials were
shown conclusively not to work. It is unlikely that anything as clear and definite will be reported next year, but there should still be plenty of news to follow, with a pipeline of vaccine candidates that is expanding by the month.
Looking forward to 2004: treatment for hepatitis C
Hepatitis C treatment has moved forward subtantially in the past two years with the widespread adoption of combination therapy with pegylated interferon and ribavirin. What does 2004 hold for the treatment of hepatitis C, especially in people coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C?
UK government announces plans to restrict NHS care for non-UK nationals
The UK government has announced plans to limit the rights of overseas visitors and failed asylum seekers to free treatment from the National Health Service.
About HATIP
A regular electronic newsletter for health care workers and community-based organisations on HIV treatment in resource-limited settings.
Its publication is supported by the UK government's Department for International Development (DfID), the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund and the Stop TB Department of the World Health Organization.
Other supporters include Positive Action GlaxoSmithKline (founding sponsor); Abbott Fund; Abbott Molecular; Cavidi; Elton John AIDS Foundation; Merck & Co., Inc.; Pfizer Ltd; F Hoffmann La Roche; Schering Plough; and Tibotec, a division of Janssen Cilag.
latest aidsmap news
- 'Hidden epidemic' of HIV amongst African migrants in the United States
- Blood viral load predicts HIV transmission better than semen viral load in small study among MSM
- Infectiousness and antiretroviral therapy: reports look set to further fuel the debate
- Albendazole treatment of helminth co-infection in Kenyan HIV patients raises CD4 counts
- Justice Edwin Cameron calls for a campaign against 'misguided criminal laws and prosecutions'
- HIV prevalence and incidence in Uganda on the way up
- Half of Russian XDR-TB patients cured with aggressive treatment
- Updated British HIV pregnancy guidelines published
- Incidence increasing of HIV-associated multicentric Castleman's disease, a relatively rare lymphatic cancer
- Rapid progression of liver fibrosis in HIV-positive gay men recently infected with hepatitis C
