HIV self-testing made cheaper
POORER countries were set to see their access to HIV self-tests increase dramatically after a deal to slash prices in half and boost production, Unitaid said yesterday.
The international health agency said it had closed a deal with US-based global health-care company Viatris that would see blood-based HIV selftests made available for under $2 across 135 low and middle-income countries.
HIV self-tests are seen as vital tools to help people more easily discover their status and move towards the treatment they need, and thus also to reducing the HIV burden globally.
This is particularly relevant in poorer countries, where concerns around stigma and difficulties accessing health-care can create significant barriers, said Unitaid, which works on innovations on major diseases.
“Access to self-tests has been recognised as a key factor in meeting the global goal of 90% of people knowing their HIV status,” Unitaid spokesperson Herve Verhoosel said. “In just the past six years, that rate has nearly doubled, from 45 to 81 percent,” he said.
But achieving broader testing has been hampered by the fact that the market for HIV self-tests in low- and middle-income countries has been dominated by a single affordable oral HIV test, the OraSure.
That test is sold at cost in a limited number of poorer countries for $2 (about R28), but elsewhere the price is higher, and other options have cost significantly more.
To try to fix that problem, Unitaid and US non-profit Population Services International (PSI) launched a call for proposals last July on ways to drive forward access to the tests.
The result was the Viatris deal, which Unitaid said should expand the market and give countries more choice when it comes to self-tests.
This, Verhoosel said, would make “it easier to acquire the products and embed them in health systems, with the ultimate aim of helping the eight million people estimated to be unaware of their HIV status know they are infected and get treatment.”
Meg Doherty, who heads the World Health Organization’s global HIV, hepatitis and STI programmes, hailed “the wider availability of affordable HIV self-testing kits to increase access to testing.”