Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ten Years On, Armenia's So-Called "Miracle Cure" For AIDS Still Unpr

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ten Years On, Armenia's So-Called "Miracle Cure" For AIDS Still Unpr

    TEN YEARS ON, ARMENIA'S SO-CALLED "MIRACLE CURE" FOR AIDS STILL UNPROVEN
    By Sara Khojoyan and Leah Kohlenberg

    EurasiaNet
    Nov 25 2008
    NY

    For ten years, Armenians have been told about the wonders of Armenicum,
    the locally produced formula whose makers claim it has curative powers
    over the deadly HIV virus.

    And while doctors who use the drug say it does seem to relieve some
    of the symptoms of HIV, after a decade the company has yet to produce
    any viable clinical trials proving more substantive curing options.

    What most Armenians probably do not know is that their tax dollars
    are paying for Armenicum, which is more than triple the cost of the
    world's only proven treatment for HIV, antiretroviral (ARV) drugs. They
    probably also are not aware that in a few months Armenicum may be
    the only choice available in Armenia for future HIV-infected patients.

    In Armenia, treating HIV-positive patients should not be a major
    problem -- and on the surface, the system seems to be working. The
    HIV-positive population is small, with only 649 reported cases. Even
    when one includes the estimated 3,000 unreported cases out there,
    they still make up a mere 0.1 percent of the total population. Armenia
    does offer an efficient, government-funded National Center for AIDS
    Prevention, which not only records, but also offers testing and
    treatment to anyone who needs it, based on World Health Organization
    standards of care.

    But instead of paying for all accepted treatments for HIV patients, the
    government is throwing all its money and resources towards supporting
    Armenicum, and is requiring that AIDS Center doctors offer the drug,
    while unproven, as a choice. Currently, it costs about $6,000 per
    patient per year to be treated with Armenicum, while the standard ARV
    regimen costs $1,700 per patient per year. That means it costs the
    Armenian taxpayer $300,000 to treat just the 50 Armenicum patients
    approved this year. Compare that to the estimated $160,000 it costs
    to treat 93 patients with ARV funded by the Global Fund.

    So far, the international US-funded Global Fund, through the
    local World Vision office, has been paying for and procuring ARV
    treatments. But, technically, that money ran out in June, and though
    the grant has been extended until February and the National Centre for
    AIDS Prevention is currently applying for another five year grant,
    there is no guarantee that the Global Fund will continue to fund
    future ARV treatments.

    "If the Global Fund does not finance Armenia again, the national HIV
    program will be in great jeopardy," said Mark Kelly, World Vision
    National Director. "Currently the Global Fund pays for the majority
    of testing and prevention programs, and all ARV treatments."

    Compounding the problem, according to World Vision Procurement
    Officer Mher Barseghyan, is that ARVs are currently not a registered
    drug in Armenia and the government has so far been unable to pay the
    approximate $15,000 it will cost to register these internationally
    accepted drugs as "safe to import." Because the drugs are not
    registered, each shipment takes about six months to arrive in the
    country, from the hundreds of phone calls he must make to individual
    drug companies in an effort to convince them to send such small
    batches, to the months those boxes of ARVs spend sitting in customs
    aging to the point of expiration.

    "Right now, we are managing to get treatment to everyone who needs
    it," he said. "But as the HIV problem gets worse, it will be more
    difficult to bring enough drugs into the country."

    When Armenicum was first introduced in Armenia ten years ago, founders
    called it a "revolutionary cure for AIDS," and it immediately captured
    high-ranking government officials' interest. Early on, initial payments
    for Armenicum treatments came from the Defense Ministry, hoping to
    promote the drug's research and development. Armenicum's possibilities
    caused a buzz of excitement in the tiny country. Businessmen, it was
    reported in some newspapers in 1999, were buying up property so that
    they could rent it to all the people who would fly to Armenia to take
    the cure.

    Yet a decade on, only about 800 people have actually taken Armenicum.

    Worldwide, the most effective treatment for HIV are antiretroviral
    drugs, which in internationally accepted clinical trials have been the
    only proven way to keep patients alive, often for years. The drugs work
    by directly attacking and reducing the amount of HIV virus in the body,
    keeping the patient from developing Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
    (AIDS), a complete immune system failure that leads to death. The
    drugs, offered in cocktails of three or four at a time, are often
    changed as the virus becomes resistant.

    Alternatively, the makers of Armenicum, whose primary ingredient is
    iodide, claim it boosts the immune system, allowing the body to fight
    the virus. Armenicum clinic doctors also contend the drug has been
    shown to reduce a patient's viral load -- the amount of HIV virus in
    the body -- and that the HIV virus never becomes resistant to it.

    The problem is that company scientists have never even tried to
    prove any of these claims -- at least, not according to the World
    Health Organization international standards of clinical trials that
    ARVs have passed. They admit to not even formally monitoring the 250
    patients who have been treated with the drug in the past four years,
    though they contend "many" have lived for ten years using the drug.

    "It's still experimental and we are in the middle of the testing
    phase," said Ashot Melkonyan, head of the Armenicum Clinical Center in
    Yerevan. "But when we are ready, we will show the world what we have."

    Despite the lack of evidence supporting Armenicum's claims, the
    National Center for AIDS Prevention clinicians say they consider
    Armenicum doctors colleagues in the fight against HIV, and have
    supported anecdotal claims that some of their patients have responded
    well to the treatment.

    "We are cooperating all the time, and we always discuss every case
    to find a better solution," said Dr. Arshak Papoyan, head of the
    National Centre for AIDS Prevention Epidemiology Unit.

    But it's hard to find a doctor treating HIV patients who will be quoted
    publicly saying the drug doesn't work, some say, because the pressure
    for the Armenian-made drug to succeed is so high that criticizing it
    is not allowed.

    "I know many clinicians who don't believe in Armenicum, but they are
    not allowed to say anything," said one doctor involved in the HIV
    treatment field, who refused to be identified.

    Even if the jury is still out on Armenicum, World Vision and Global
    Fund representatives say the most important thing is to make sure
    HIV patients have an informed choice between all the treatment options.

    "We just want to make sure ARVs are available," said Kelly. "The most
    important thing is that every person living with HIV can be treated
    with ARVs if they choose."

    Editor's Note: Sara Khojoyan is a reporter with ArmeniaNow.com in
    Yerevan. Leah Kohlenberg is a journalist, trainer and editor of "This
    Month," a monthly collection of articles from Armenian journalists
    published by the IREX Core Media Support Program.
Working...
X