Southern Africa - OASIS
Matthias Egger, Principal Investigator
University of Berne
Berne, Switzerland
Southern Africa is where almost 30 of the approximately 40 million HIV-infected people in the world live, in an area estimated to have 2 of the global population. While an estimated 2 million men, women, and children are yet in urgent need of antiretroviral treatment in this region, close to 200,000 individuals are now believed by the World Health Organization to be receiving treatment. Answers are urgently needed to clinical and operational research questions regarding the most effective implementation and monitoring of wide-scale antiretroviral treatment delivery.
Specific
Aims:
1. To measure the effectiveness of antiretroviral therapy in southern
Africa, and to describe
factors that influence outcomes;
2. To improve the prognosis of people living with HIV and AIDS eligible
for or initiating highly active antiretroviral treatment in southern
Africa through timely and operative regional epidemiological
evaluations; and
3. To increase the capacity for delivering antiretroviral therapy in
this region by increasing the capacity for monitoring exposures and
outcomes at the individual and population levels.
Research
Objectives:
1. To describe issues related the provision of health care to children
and adults in southern Africa with a focus on the delivery of ART,
waiting times and program level influences on survival and other
outcomes, including losses to follow up;
2. To describe antiretroviral treatment issues in adults (including
pregnant women) and children, with an emphasis on the monitoring of
treatment response and prognostic factors, including exposure to drugs
to prevent mother to child transmission of HIV, and adverse events
associated with antiretroviral treatment; and
3. To describe issues related to important complications of HIV
infection and antiretroviral therapy use, with a focus on tuberculosis,
the immune reconstitution and inflammatory syndrome, and prophylaxis
against life-threatening opportunistic infections.
Research
Design and Methods:
The OASIS Collaboration includes 17 clinics and clinical cohorts in 6
countries in the region, involving 35, 070 HIV-1 infected adults and
children. We will use innovative and state-of-the-art
statistical approaches to analyze data from this observational cohort
study, including techniques which account for the longitudinal and
hierarchical structure of the data. An operational structure
is proposed that emphasizes the long-term collaborative and
capacity-building approach of the collaboration.
Regional Publications
Adherence to antiretroviral therapy in young children in Cape Town, South Africa, measured by medication return and caregiver self-report: a prospective cohort study.
Davies MA, Boulle A, Fakir T, Nuttall J, Eley B.
BMC Pediatr. 2008 Sep 4;8:34. PMID: 18771599
Assessing the contribution of the immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome to mortality in developing country antiretroviral therapy programs (Editorial)
Davies MA, Egger M, Keiser O and Boulle A
Clin Infect Dis. 2009 September 15; 49(6): 973-975
Authors' response: the importance of asking the right question
Keiser O, Egger M
Trop Med Int Health. 2010 Jan 11. [Epub ahead of print]
CD4(+) T cell count decreases by ethnicity among untreated patients with HIV infection in South Africa and Switzerland.
May M, Wood R, Myer L, Taffé P, Rauch A, Battegay M, Egger M; Cape Town AIDS Cohort; Swiss HIV Cohort Study.
J Infect Dis. 2009 Dec 1;200(11):1729-35.
Early mortality and loss to follow-up in HIV-infected children starting antiretroviral therapy in Southern Africa
Fenner L, Brinkhof MW, Keiser O, Weigel R, Cornell M, Moultrie H, Prozesky H, Technau K, Eley B, Vaz P, Pascoe M, Giddy J, Van Cutsem G, Wood R, Egger M, Davies MA; for the International epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate AIDS in Southern Africa (IeDEA-SA)
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2010 Aug 15;54(5):524-32