South African Journal of HIV Medicine
2000 | 3,002,836 words
The Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine focuses on HIV/AIDS treatment, prevention, and related clinical and public health topics. It publishes original research, reviews, case reports, editorials, and correspondence, with articles freely accessible online per open access principles. At least one issue is published yearly, with additional speci...
Invited Comment
Sophia Pathai,
HMPG
Read the Summary
Download the PDF file of the original publication
Year: 2010 | Doi: 10.4102/sajhivmed.v11i1.244
Copyright (license): Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.
[[[ p. 1 ]]]
[Summary: This page is an invited comment on cytomegalovirus (CMV) in HIV patients. CMV can cause various disorders, but retinal disease (CMVR) is most common and termed the 'neglected disease of the AIDS pandemic'. CMVR can lead to visual loss. A Botswana survey found 16.5% of HAART users had CMVR. Early detection and affordable treatment are crucial.]
T H E S O U T H E R N A F R I C A N J O U R N A L O F H I V M E D I C I N E A P R I L 2 0 1 0 35 Invited Comment Cytomegalovirus can cause a wide spectrum of multi-systemic disorders including pulmonary disease, gastrointestinal disorders and disabling central or peripheral neurological dysfunction, as well as other manifestations that are well described by Laher et al . in their article. However, retinal disease is by far the most common clinical manifestation of CMV for patients with HIV, and this devastating condition has rightly been termed ‘the neglected disease of the AIDS pandemic’ 1 Cytomegalovirus retinitis (CMVR) is the most frequent cause of visual loss in individuals with AIDS, and before availability of HAART in the USA approximately 30% of patients with AIDS developed CMVR 2 Direct involvement of the optic disc and macula, retinal detachment and immune recovery-related phenomena can all complicate the condition, and may lead to visual impairment or blindness. A recent survey in Botswana suggests that up to 16.5% of individuals accessing HAART in a hospital setting have CMVR, in alignment with the findings of Visser, based in Durban 3,4 The high burden of HIV disease and the increasing scale-up of HAART provision in South Africa (with patients often initiating treatment at low CD 4 counts) suggest that cytomegalovirus disease, whether ocular or systemic, will have a huge impact on HIV-related morbidity and mortality. Detection of systemic CMV disease may need to be augmented by diagnostic laboratory tests, as outlined by the authors. However, retinal CMV disease is considered to have a characteristic appearance on ophthalmoscopy. Clinical examination of the fundus by indirect ophthalmoscopy is the gold standard for detection of CMVR, yet in many resource-limited settings the geographical and numerical maldistribution of ophthalmologists to HIVaffected individuals renders this an untenable situation. Furthermore, the cost of treatment is prohibitive, and intra-ocular injections for CMVR also require ophthalmic expertise As HIV clinicians and eye care professionals, we are in a position to curtail the ‘neglect’ of CMV – diagnosis and management of CMV infection, whether systemic or ocular, should be part of routine care. The development of novel strategies to train non-ophthalmologists to screen for CMVR means that ocular case detection may be possible even with decentralisation of HIV services to primary care levels. However, detection of CMV infection is just the first of many steps. A major obstacle faced in South Africa is the challenge of making treatment available, effective and affordable. We need to rise to the challenge and lobby for availability of economically priced treatment, otherwise we risk leaving our patients vulnerable to the scourge of CMV disease – and potentially a life filled with darkness. Sophia Pathai Clinical Research Fellow International Centre for Eye Health London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine REFERENCES 1. Heiden D, Ford N, Wilson D, Rodriguez WR, et al. Cytomegalovirus retinitis: the neglected disease of the AIDS pandemic. PLoS Med 2007; 4(12): e 334 2. Hoover DR, Peng Y, Saah A, et al. Occurrence of cytomegalovirus retinitis after human immunodeficiency virus immunosuppression. Arch Ophthalmol 1996; 114(7): 821- 827 3. Nkomazana O, Tshitswana D. Ocular complications of HIV infection in sub-Saharan Africa. Current HIV/AIDS Reports 2008, 5: 120-125 4. Visser L. Managing CMV retinitis in the developing world. Comm Eye Health 2003; 16(47): 38-39.
Other Health Sciences Concepts:
Discover the significance of concepts within the article: ‘Invited Comment’. Further sources in the context of Health Sciences might help you critically compare this page with similair documents:
Macula, Hiv, Blindness, Treatment, Screen, Vulnerable, Visual impairment, HIV infection, Retinal detachment, Ophthalmoscopy, Visual loss, Ophthalmologist, Pulmonary disease, South Africa, Neurological Dysfunction, Gold standard, Primary care, Primary care level, Cytomegalovirus, CMV-retinitis, Ocular complications, Haart, Gastrointestinal disorder, Routine care, AIDS pandemic, Fundus, Resource-limited setting, HIV-related morbidity, HIV-related mortality, CMV infection, Cytomegalovirus retinitis, Optic disc, Aid, Eye care professionals, Retinal disease, HIV disease, Botswana, Treatment availability, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Indirect ophthalmoscopy, HIV medicine, Central or peripheral, HIV service, Neglected disease, HAART provision, Cytomegalovirus disease, Novel Strategies, Clinical Research Fellow.
