HIV prevention study finds universal “test and treat” approach can reduce new infections

This article originally appeared on nih.gov and you can find the full article here.

New HIV infections declined by 30 percent in southern African communities where health workers conducted house-to-house voluntary HIV testing, referred people who tested positive to begin HIV treatment according to local guidelines, and offered other proven HIV prevention measures to those who tested negative. Local guidelines evolved during the study from offering HIV treatment based on immune health to offering immediate treatment for all.

Surprisingly, the investigators found that new HIV infections did not decline in communities where those who tested positive were offered immediate treatment throughout the study. Analyses are under way to try to explain this puzzling outcome.

These results from the large clinical trial called Population Effects of Antiretroviral Therapy to Reduce HIV Transmission (PopART), or HPTN 071, were announced…

 

(Full Article)

CHIPTS is going to CROI 2019

Some of our very own Center of HIV Identification, Prevention, and Treatment Services (CHIPTS) faculty and fellows are headed to the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infection (CROI) 2019 so make sure to catch their work at the conference this week! Check out or download the full list below.

For more information about CROI 2019, visit their website or check out their full program.

CHIPTS Members and Affiliates Oral Abstracts and Poster Presentation List for CROI 2019

CDC Data Confirm: Progress in HIV Prevention Has Stalled

This article originally appeared on HIV.gov. To see the full article, click here

The dramatic decline in annual HIV infections has stopped and new infections have stabilized in recent years, according to a CDC report published today.

The report provides the most recent data on HIV trends in America from 2010 to 2016. It shows that after about five years of substantial declines, the number of HIV infections began to level off in 2013 at about 39,000 infections per year…

(Full Article)

Spotlight: Norweeta Milburn, PhD

Norweeta Milburn, PhD is a Professor-in-Residence in the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences in the Division of Population Behavioral Health at the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.  She also is the Director of the CHIPTS Development Core.

Norweeta obtained her PhD in Community Psychology from the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor).  After earning her degree, she moved to Washington, DC where she began her teaching and research career.   Then in 1990, she accepted a faculty position with Hofstra University in New York, as an Associate Professor of Psychology.  From the beginning, Norweeta’s research interest has always been concentrated on working with underserved and marginalized groups, particularly among those most impacted by the HIV/AIDS epidemic.  Her research specifically focuses on populations who are homeless and from ethnic/racial minority backgrounds with mental health and substance abuse problems.

Since joining UCLA in 1999, she has led or co-led several studies funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute on Drug Abuse, and National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities.  Norweeta recently completed a study that involved adapting the STRIVE (Support to Reunite, Involve, and Value Each Other) intervention and testing its efficacy for young people re-entering communities from the juvenile justice system. Currently, she leads the Health Disparities Core funded by the California HIV/AIDS Research Program that is part of the UCLA Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) and AIDS Institute.  Among the main goals of the Health Disparities Core is to build and sustain collaborative partnerships between research and at-risk vulnerable communities in Los Angeles County and to facilitate culturally-appropriate outreach and dissemination of research projects to communities that are highly impacted by HIV.  Additionally, Norweeta is a Co-Principal Investigator of a NIDA-funded R25 grant, the UCLA HIV/AIDS, Substance Abuse, and Trauma Training Program (HA-STTP).  The program trains and provides mentorship to a national cohort of early career ethnic and culturally diverse clinician researchers and post-doctoral scholars to conduct research on reducing substance abuse and HIV transmission in underserved populations at risk for traumatic stress and health disparities.

All of Norweeta’s research, training, and community engagement work are anchored within the context of addressing health disparities in mental illness and drug abuse treatment outcomes, and HIV prevention to promote global health and well-being of adolescents and their families.  Norweeta is interested in examining how parental practices, and resources and behaviors with the context of the community system of care can help underserved adolescents develop into healthy functioning adults. Her goal is to develop replicable, sustainable family interventions for underserved adolescents to reduce their risk for HIV, substance abuse and mental illness.

Though work seems to encompass a lot of her life, Norweeta always makes time for her family, which includes her loving spouse and 25 year-old daughter.  She enjoys taking walks, going camping, and hiking. Norweeta truly loves living on the West Coast with all the national parks and other wonderful outdoor spaces! One of her personal life goals is to get in at least one more white water rafting trip before she is too old to get in and out of the raft.

Each month, we’re featuring a member of our CHIPTS family and their work! To see past spotlights, check them out on the spotlights page and make sure to check back to see who we feature next!

National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

This post originally appeared on AidsInfo. You can find the original post here with more resources.

February 7, 2019 is National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day.

National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day is an annual opportunity to promote HIV education, testing, community involvement, and treatment in black communities. HIV diagnoses among African Americans have declined in recent years. However, more work is needed to reduce HIV among African Americans. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):

  • In 2016, African Americans accounted for 44% of HIV diagnoses, despite making up 12% of the U.S. population.
  • In 2016, more than half (58% or 10,223) of African Americans who received an HIV diagnosis were gay or bisexual men.
  • In 2015, 3,379 African Americans died of HIV disease, accounting for 52% of total deaths from HIV that year in the United States.

To learn more, browse this National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day webpage.

2019 HIV Next Generation Conference

January 25, 2019 – The 2019 HIV Next Generation Conference, hosted by CHIPTS welcomed 121 attendees to the UCLA Campus for a day of discussion, learning, and networking. Drs. Steve Shoptaw and Norweeta Milburn gave compelling opening remarks to start the day and was followed by an inspiring and dynamic plenary by USC’s Dr. Ricky N. Bluthenthal, who spoke on his work in the community over the last 25 years.

Dr. Ricky N. Bluthenthal giving the opening plenary.

The day’s agenda featured seven trainees who gave oral presentations of their research projects and received thought provoking questions from the audience, which ranged from researchers, community providers, faculty members, and other students. In addition, seven trainees presented their work through the poster session, lending to many lively conversations that engaged undergraduate, graduate, and postdoctoral researchers with faculty and the community.

In addition, the conference featured a policy impact panel lead by our Policy Core director Dr. Arleen Leibowitz and included Dr. Ninez Ponce, Ricky Rosales, Craig Pulsipher, and Dr. Nina Harawa. The panel was diverse in background with panelists from the city, state, and various levels of educational institutions which created a stimulating conversation on the impact of policy on research and, likewise, research on policy.

Wendy Garland giving an update on the Los Angeles County HIV/AIDS Strategy for 2020 and Beyond.

Ms. Wendy Garland of the Los Angeles County Division on HIV and STD Programs (DHSP) gave the afternoon plenary presentation.  She provided an update on the Los Angeles County HIV/AIDS Strategy for 2020 and Beyond initiative (https://www.lacounty.hiv/) as well as some key collaborations with CHIPTS. In addition to sharing the priorities for HIV and STD prevention and treatment for Los Angeles County, she highlighted a number of collaborations in the works, which received excitement from many conference attendees.

Dr. Steve Shoptaw, CHIPTS Center Director, giving the closing plenary for the day.

Dr. Steve Shoptaw presented the closing plenary on Methamphetamine and HIV Treatment and Prevention that gave insight into the current state of the opioid crisis and it’s impact on those living with HIV and those at risk. Dr. Norweeta Milburn‘s left everyone inspired and hopeful for the future with her closing statements, proving the conference to be a full day of science, networking, and learning.

You can download all of the presentations (individually or in one pdf) and the full program below! We’ve also posted our Gallery on Facebook so make sure to check out all of the photos from the conference.

Next Generation Program: 2019 HIV Next Generation Conference - Agenda
All Presentations: Health Disparities in HIV-Positive Incarcerated and Post-Incarcerated Populations - Slides

Welcome and Opening Remarks

Steve Shoptaw, PhD
Director, UCLA CHIPTS
Professor, UCLA Departments of Family Medicine and Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Science
Vice Chair, Research in Family Medicine

Norweeta Milburn, PhD
Professor-in-Residence, UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences
Co-Director, UCLA HIV/AIDS, Substance Abuse, and Trauma Training Program (HA-STTP)
Director, UCLA Center For AIDS Research Health Disparities Core
Director, Development Core, UCLA CHIPTS

Opening Plenary

Morning Plenary: Lessons learned from 25 years of combatting HIV among people who inject drugs (PWID) - Slides
Ricky N. Bluthenthal, PhD
Professor, Department of Preventive Medicine, USC Keck School of Medicine
Professor, Institute for Prevention Research, USC Keck School of Medicine

People Who Inject Drugs (PWID)

Discussant, Ricky N. Bluthenthal, PhD
Professor, Department of Preventive Medicine, USC Keck School of Medicine
Professor, Institute for Prevention Research, USC Keck School of Medicine

Kelsey Simpson, MA
Correlates of mental health disorders in people who inject drugs (PWID) - Slides

Wei Cao, MS
Challenges facing HIV-positive clients in methadone maintenance treatment in China - Slides

Policy Impact for HIV/AIDS Research Panel

Policy Continuum: Condoms in California Prisons - Slides

Arleen Leibowitz , PhD
UCLA, CHIPTS Policy Core
Professor Emeritus, Department of Public Policy, UCLA School of Public Affairs

Ninez Ponce, MPP, PhD
Professor, Department of Health Policy and Management, UCLA FSPH
UCLA California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)

Ricky Rosales, BA
LA City AIDS Coordinator

Craig Pulsipher, MPP, MSW
State Affairs Specialist, APLA

Nina Harawa, PhD, MPH
UCLA, CHIPTS Policy Core
Professor, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA

Adolescent (HIV) Trials Network (ATN)

Discussant, Dallas Swendeman, PhD, MPH
Co-Director, Development Core, UCLA CHIPTS
Associate Professor, UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences
Co-Director, UCGHI Center of Expertise on Women’s Health, Gender and Empowerment

Anne E. Fehrenbacher, PhD, MPH
Gender disparities in prevalence, frequency, and baseline correlates of transactional sex among high-risk adolescents - Slides

Drew Wood-Palmer, BS
Prevalence of Chlamydia, Gonorrhea, and Syphilis Antibody Among High-risk Adolescents in Los Angeles and New Orleans - Slides

Afternoon Plenary

Afternoon Plenary: Update on HIV in Los Angeles County and the Los Angeles County HIV/AIDS Strategy - Slides
Wendy Garland, MPH
Chief Epidemiologist, Division of HIV and STD Programs, LAC DPH

Underserved Populations

Discussant, Cathy Reback, PhD
Senior Research Scientist, Friends Research Institute, Inc.
Executive Director, Friends Community Center
Core Director, Combination Prevention Core, UCLA CHIPTS

Michael Li, PhD, MPH
Stimulant use, housing instability, and depressive symptoms comorbid conditions and viral trajectories in the context of coordinated HIV care in Los Angeles County - Slides

Sabrina Smiley, PhD
Jackd dating application motivation, experiences, and sexual risk behaviors a qualitative study - Slides

Siddharth Raich, MPH
Health Disparities in HIV-Positive Incarcerated and Post-Incarcerated Populations - Slides

Closing Plenary

Methamphetamine and HIV Treatment and Prevention
Steve Shoptaw, PhD
Director, UCLA CHIPTS
Professor, UCLA Departments of Family Medicine and Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Science
Vice Chair, Research in Family Medicine

Closing Remarks

Norweeta Milburn, PhD
Professor-in-Residence, UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences
Co-Director, UCLA HIV/AIDS, Substance Abuse, and Trauma Training Program (HA-STTP)
Director, UCLA Center For AIDS Research Health Disparities Core
Director, Development Core, UCLA CHIPTS

Steve Shoptaw, PhD
Director, UCLA CHIPTS
Professor, UCLA Departments of Family Medicine and Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Science
Vice Chair, Research in Family Medicine

Poster Presentations

Benjamin Jones, BA
What’s missing? Investigating the gaps between PrEP knowledge, eligibility, and utilization among at-risk youth - Slides

Carla Del Cid, BS
Incorporating dating application strategies to recruit youth at risk or youth living with HIV (ATN CARES Project) - Slides

Diep Nguyen, MD
Perceived occupational risk and negative attitude towards people who use drugs among community health workers in Vietnam - Slides

Jesse Goldshear, MPH
Nutritional differences among people who use drugs from a multi-site study in California - Slides

Joan Christodoulou, PhD
Crystal clear with the Medication Adherence Trainer (MAT): An interactive educational demonstration to increase knowledge and adherence to antiretroviral therapy among youth living with HIV

Loc Pham, MS
Social support and motivation to change among people who use drugs in Vietnam - Slides

Melissa Medich, PhD, MPH
The pull of soccer and the push of Xhosa boys in an HIV and drug abuse intervention in the Western Cape, South Africa - Slides

Special Thanks

We would like to thank the members of the Conference Planning Committee for their countless hours in planning and organizing this conference including: Isabelle Chu, Damilola Jolayemi, Uyen Kao, Norweeta Milburn, and Dallas Swendeman.

Also, we would like to thank the generous volunteers who helped with today’s event: Jennifer Baughman and Sandra Cuevas.

Community Advisory Board Creates “U=U for Women” Infographic

CAB members Damilola Jolayemi, Damone Thomas, Ricky Rosales, Carolyn Belton, Natalie Sanchez, and Wendy Garland show off the infographic at CHIPTS 2019 HIV Next Generation Conference.

After months of development, the CHIPTS Community Advisory Board (CAB) proudly presents an infographic on U=U specifically for women this January (2019) for this year’s CAB Initiative. The infographic includes short, concise, and informative statements regarding U=U for women.

We highly encourage women to seek out more information regarding U=U, viral load, viral suppression, and pregnancy from a medical provider.

Two versions of this infographic are available for download: an editable version (with room for providers to add their contact information) and the original version.
U=U for Women - Infographic (Original)
U=U for Women - Infographic (Editable)

A Spanish version of the Infographic is also available. I=I para Las Mujeres - Infografia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Please contact Damilola Jolayemi at ojolayemi@mednet.ucla.edu for more information.

For HIV, Treatment is Prevention

This article originally appeared on hiv.gov and was cross-posted from NIH Director’s Blog. You can view the original article here.

For almost four decades, researchers have worked tirelessly to find a cure for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which causes AIDS. There’s still more work to do, but a recent commentary published in JAMA [1] by Anthony Fauci, director of NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and his colleagues serves as a reminder of just how far we’ve come. Today, thanks to scientific advances, especially the development of effective antiretroviral therapy (ART), most people living with HIV can live full and productive lives. These developments have started to change how our society views HIV infection.

In their commentary, the NIH scientists describe the painstaking research that has now firmly established that people who take ART daily as prescribed, and who achieve and maintain an undetectable viral load (the amount of HIV in the blood), cannot sexually transmit the virus to others. To put it simply: Undetectable = Untransmittable (U=U).

The U=U message was introduced in 2016 by the Prevention Access Campaign, an international health equity initiative that aims to help end the HIV epidemic and HIV-related social stigma. The major breakthrough in combination ART regimens, which successfully reduced viral loads for many HIV patients, came over 20 years ago. But their importance for HIV prevention wasn’t immediately apparent.

There’d been some hints of U=U, but it was the results of the NIH-funded HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) 052, published in The New England Journal of Medicine [2] in 2011, that offered the first rigorous clinical evidence. Among heterosexual couples in the randomized clinical trial, no HIV transmissions to an uninfected partner were observed when ART consistently, durably suppressed the virus in the partner living with HIV.

The data provided convincing evidence that ART not only treats HIV but also prevents the sexual transmission of HIV infection. The public health implications of what’s sometimes referred to as “treatment as prevention” were obvious and exciting. In fact, the discovery made Science’s 2011 list of top 10 Breakthroughs of the Year .

Three subsequent studies, known as PARTNER 1 and 2 and Opposites Attract, confirmed and extended the findings of the HPTN 052 study. All three showed that people with HIV taking ART, who had undetectable HIV levels in their blood, had essentially no risk of passing the virus on to their HIV-negative partners.

Of course, the success of U=U depends on people with HIV having the needed access to health care and taking their medications as prescribed every day of their lives [3]. ART works by preventing the virus from making more copies of itself. It’s important to note that achieving an undetectable viral load with treatment can take time—up to 6 months. Viral load testing should be performed on a regular basis to ensure that the virus remains at undetectable levels. If treatment is stopped, the virus typically rebounds within a matter of weeks. So, strict adherence to ART over the long term is absolutely essential.

Practically speaking, though, ART alone won’t be enough to end the spread of HIV, and other methods of HIV prevention are still needed. In fact, we’re now at a critical juncture in HIV research as work continues on preventive vaccines that could one day bring about a durable end to the pandemic.

But for now, there are more than 35 million people worldwide who are HIV positive [4]. With currently available interventions, experts have predicted that about 50 million people around the world will become HIV positive from 2015 to 2035 [5]. Work is proceeding actively on the vaccine, and also on ways to totally eradicate the virus from infected individuals (a “cure”), but that is proving to be extremely challenging.

Meanwhile, with continued advances, including improved accessibility to testing, adherence to existing medications, and use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in high risk individuals, the goal is to reduce greatly the number of new cases of HIV/AIDS.

References

[1] HIV Viral Load and Transmissibility of HIV Infection: Undetectable Equals Untransmittable. Eisinger RW, Dieffenbach CW, Fauci AS. JAMA. 2019 Jan 10. 

[2] Prevention of HIV-1 infection with early antiretroviral therapy. Cohen MS, Chen YQ, McCauley M, Gamble T, Hosseinipour MC, Kumarasamy N, Hakim JG, Kumwenda J, Grinsztejn B, Pilotto JH, Godbole SV, Mehendale S, Chariyalertsak S, Santos BR, Mayer KH, Hoffman IF, Eshleman SH, Piwowar-Manning E, Wang L, Makhema J, Mills LA, de Bruyn G, Sanne I, Eron J, Gallant J, Havlir D, Swindells S, Ribaudo H, Elharrar V, Burns D, Taha TE, Nielsen-Saines K, Celentano D, Essex M, Fleming TR; HPTN 052 Study Team. N Engl J Med. 2011 Aug 11;365(6):493-505.

[3] HIV Treatment (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services) 

[4] HIV/AIDS   (World Health Organization)

[5] Effectiveness of UNAIDS targets and HIV vaccination across 127 countries. Medlock J, Pandey A, Parpia AS, Tang A, Skrip LA, Galvani AP. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Apr 11;114(15):4017-4022.

Slowing the Emerging Opioid Epidemic in Southern California: Responding to Increases in Opioid, Prescription, and Injection Drug Use Meeting Report

The UCLA CFAR-sponsored “Slowing the Emerging Opioid Epidemic in Southern California: Responding to Increases in Opioid, Prescription, and Injection Drug Use” was held on November 16, 2018.  This meeting was hosted by Drs. Pamina Gorbach and Steve Shoptaw of UCLA and Ricky Bluthenthal of USC in November 2018 and  explored why the opioid epidemic has not exploded in California and how researchers can contribute to prevention efforts.

We engaged leading HIV/AIDS research to address the impacts of opioids in the populations too often marginalized and especially vulnerable to the effects of HIV (e.g., men who have sex with men, racial/ethnic minorities, and injection drug users).  The report details our findings and articulates both policy and research recommendations for the field. 

You can download the full meeting report here:  Slowing the Emerging Opioid Epidemic in Southern California: Responding to Increases in Opioid, Prescription, and Injection Drug Use Meeting Report

This event was made possible with the generous support of the UCLA Center for AIDS Research (AI028697) and the UCLA AIDS Institute. Additional funds were provided by the Center for HIV Identification, Prevention, and Treatment Services (MH058107).