Mark A. Wainberg, Ph.D.
Journal of the American Medical Association
Volume 352, Number 8
February 24, 2005
The 2000 International AIDS Conference in Durban, South Africa, focused the
world's attention on disparities between rich and poor countries with
respect to access to antiretroviral drugs. At that time, an estimated 7000
people in Africa had access to effective combination antiretroviral
regimens. Though the number exceeds 100,000 today, it is still a far cry
from the 8 million who are thought to require such therapy. In response, in
2003, the World Health Organization (WHO) launched an ambitious program
termed "3 by 5" in an attempt to treat at least 3 million infected people
by the end of 2005.
Availability of Antiretroviral Drugs in Different Regions of the World
Other approved drugs available in Western countries include delavirdine (a
nonnucleoside reverse-transcriptase inibitor) and zalcitabine (a nucleoside
reverse-transcriptase inhibitor); these products have fallen into disuse
and are no longer recommended in either developed or developing countries.
Sadly, the WHO initiative ran into trouble almost from the start. First, it
quickly became clear that the only way to produce and stockpile the amount
of medication required would be to turn to the manufacturers of generic
drugs that could produce these compounds at low cost. This possibility
brought demands by some funders of the initiative that the generic drugs
first be shown to be the bioequivalents of the drugs that are produced by
major pharmaceutical companies and are approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA). However, international agencies such as the World
Bank and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria have
argued that delays owing to the imposition of very high standards of
bioequivalence will result in needless deaths.
Much of the past two years has been consumed by a debate on whether generic
antiretroviral drugs are truly the equivalent of their "Big Pharma" cousins
and whether they should be approved by a regulatory agency before being
used in developing countries. In the context of this debate, the WHO
recently listed a number of generic antiretroviral drugs as suitable for
its programs and then removed five of them from the list because
equivalence had not been established. Two of the five drugs were recently
reinstated, after their manufacturer conducted new bioequivalence
studies.1
An obvious question is what means should be used to document
bioequivalence, given that the WHO is not a regulatory authority and does
not have the resources with which to conduct clinical trials. Some take the
extreme position that no generic compound should be used in developing
countries until a successful randomized clinical trial directly comparing
it with its brand-name counterpart has been conducted. Such a process,
however, would be inordinately expensive, would detract from the goal of
making as much medication as possible available to people in need, and
would result in many deaths from AIDS in the interim.
Rather than permit the indiscriminate use of generic drugs, however, we
could follow a few commonsense rules. For example, equivalence could be
determined with the use of stringent chemical tests that are readily
available. Generic drugs could also be shown to be effective and nontoxic
by means of studies in animals and tissue culture, biochemical studies, and
short-term clinical trials that would include demonstrations of equivalence
with regard to such outcomes as the plasma levels and half-lives of the
drugs. Ultimately, individual countries should be the arbiters of which
drugs their citizens should be denied or permitted to take. A country that
desperately wants to import or produce generic drugs might well interpret
an attempt by the WHO or another party to impose its own rules on the
process as an infringement of national sovereignty.
It is common practice in other areas of medicine to use generic drugs in
developing countries even though the drugs have not always undergone
head-to-head comparisons with their brand-name counterparts. So why did the
WHO remove from its list generic drugs that are components of its 3-by-5
regimen? The official reason was that some of the research organizations
charged with testing for bioequivalence were not able to deliver
information on a timely basis and that good clinical and laboratory
practices might not have been followed. Although this may certainly be the
case, it begs the question of whether such standards ought to be applied in
the first place — because the imposition of unrealistically high standards
for proving bioequivalence might result in unacceptably long delays in
bringing drugs to those who need them the most.
The benefits of providing effective antiretroviral drugs to patients with
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in developing countries will
extend far beyond the direct effects on the health of the patients. Such
access would almost certainly reduce the overall rates of transmission of
HIV: high viral loads are the most important correlate of HIV transmission,
and antiretroviral drugs greatly reduce the levels of HIV in plasma and the
viral burden in fluids such as semen, often to a level below the limit of
detection.2 Hence, the public health benefits of wide access to HIV drugs
constitute an important rationale for the immediate pursuit of universal
treatment programs.
Several observers, however, have cited potential problems with such
programs, arguing that patients in developing countries are unlikely to
adhere to antiretroviral regimens and that, as a result, drug resistance
will quickly emerge and an epidemic of drug-resistant strains will ensue. A
series of recent articles emanating from a World Bank conference, however,
indicate that both these possibilities have been exaggerated.3 Indeed, the
consensus of the conference was that the public health benefits of
providing immediate broad access to antiretroviral drugs outweigh all other
considerations and that we should proceed accordingly. Several studies have
shown that patients in developing countries are at least as likely to
adhere to antiretroviral regimens as are those in North America.4 And the
potential problem of drug resistance is mitigated by reports showing that
drug-resistant viruses are often less virulent than wild-type,
drug-sensitive strains5 — though the WHO, recognizing this possibility, has
now instituted a surveillance program for HIV drug resistance.
None of which suggests that the WHO-favored regimen of stavudine,
lamivudine, and nevirapine is without problems (see table). Indeed, no
doctor in a Western country today would choose to initiate therapy with
this combination; of all the nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors,
stavudine has the greatest long-term toxicity, resulting in lipoatrophy and
lipodystrophy. Yet there are currently few, if any, alternatives, and the
benefits of providing stavudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine to millions of
HIV-infected people over the next several years far exceed any negative
consequences. There are probably good alternatives to stavudine, the best
of them possibly being tenofovir. However, a shift to this drug might
require Gilead Pharmaceuticals, its manufacturer, to assist in producing a
generic version and to surrender its intellectual-property rights in
countries, such as India, whose laws now allow patent protection for HIV
drugs that become available in 2005 and thereafter.
Potential Problems Associated with the WHO-Preferred Regimen of
Lamivudine, Stavudine, and Nevirapine
Another possibility may be to take advantage of the impending expiration of
the patent on zidovudine by using that drug as a cornerstone of HIV
therapy. For reasons of cost, this choice may make sense in both developing
and developed countries, and most studies have shown that zidovudine has
less long-term toxicity than stavudine, although it has a greater toxic
effect than tenofovir. Relevant here is the recent approval that the FDA
granted to a South African pharmaceutical company to produce a
coformulation of a combination of zidovudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine,
which will permit these drugs to be purchased under President George Bush's
President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. In the short term, however, the
problem is not only standards of bioequivalence but also the need to
increase production: only the combination of stavudine, lamivudine, and
nevirapine is currently produced in sufficiently large quantities to allow
patients rapid access to this kind of therapy.
There have been many attempts to obfuscate issues relating to the use of
generic drugs, which some portray as unsafe because they may not have met
the same criteria for approval as brand-name products have met. Some have
gone as far as to argue that it would be immoral to treat patients in
developing countries with generic drugs while patients in richer countries
receive only brand-name products. Such arguments, although presumably well
intended, will serve only to deny millions of people lifesaving drugs and
to deny the world the greater public health benefits of wide access. It
will be interesting to see whether the opponents of generic drugs will also
object to the use of generic drugs in Western countries when some of the
earliest antiretroviral agents go off patent — as both zidovudine and
didanosine will in 2005 — even though the use of generic drugs might
translate into lower overall drug prices in the West. I believe that we
should support the WHO initiative and move forward, with the understanding
that efforts will be made to prove the bioequivalence of generic and
brand-name products as soon as possible but that lesser standards may be
acceptable in the short term. I think we should also agree that the WHO
will try to change its recommended regimen, although this may not be
practical for several years to come.
Finally, if we are to deal adequately with the inevitable drug resistance
that will continue to occur, it should be understood that the major
pharmaceutical companies must retain financial incentives to discover and
develop novel HIV therapies. At the same time, these companies should
accept their share of responsibility for finding solutions to the problems
that HIV represents. A good place for them to start would be the licensing
of their products to makers of generic drugs that could manufacture
antiretroviral agents under conditions that would pass international
muster. Such collaboration could obviate the need to prove bioequivalence
under conditions that Western regulatory authorities find insufficiently
rigorous. The world cannot afford any further delay in the implementation
of programs for providing access to antiretroviral drugs that make
scientific sense and are morally imperative.
Dr. Wainberg reports having received consulting fees from GlaxoSmithKline,
Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Gilead Pharmaceuticals; lecture fees from
GlaxoSmithKline and Bristol-Myers Squibb; and research support from
GlaxoSmithKline and Idenix Pharmaceuticals.
Source Information:
Dr. Wainberg is a professor of virology and the director of the AIDS Centre
at the Jewish General Hospital, McGill University, Montreal.
References:
1. World Health Organization. Three AIDS medicines will be removed from the
prequalification list this week. August 4, 2004. (Accessed February 3,
2005, at http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2004/pr53/en/.)
2. Quinn TC, Wawer MJ, Sewankambo N, et al. Viral load and heterosexual
transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. N Engl J Med
2000;342:921-929.
3. Resistance and adherence: based on a meeting hosted by the Global HIV/AIDS
Program of the World Bank in collaboration with WHO and the International
HIV Treatment Access Coalition (ITAC), 17-18 June 2003. AIDS 2004;18:Suppl
3:S1-S74.[CrossRef]
4. Weidle PJ, Malamba S, Mwebaze R, et al. Assessment of a pilot
antiretroviral drug therapy programme in Uganda: patients' response,
survival, and drug resistance. Lancet 2002;360:34-40.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
5. Kuritzkes DR, Quinn JB, Benoit SL, et al. Drug resistance and virologic
response in NUCA 3001, a randomized trial of lamivudine (3TC) versus
zidovudine (ZDV) versus ZDV plus 3TC in previously untreated patients. AIDS
1996;10:975-981.[ISI][Medline]
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