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An overview of HIV in the European region: Challenges for the next decade
Anastasia Pharris
European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, Stockholm
GeSIDA, Vigo, 28 November 2017
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Employed by ECDC
No conflicts of interest or disclosures
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• What are the key issues in the epidemiology of HIV in the European Region?
• Is the European response to HIV sufficient?
• What challenges and opportunities lie ahead?
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Published today!
Full report can be downloaded at:
www.ecdc.europa.eu
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WHO European Region
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>160 000 persons were diagnosed with HIV in 2016
80%
4% 17%
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New HIV diagnoses per 100 000 population, 2016
5 Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
>50 per 100 000
20 to <50 per 100 000
10 to <20 per 100 000
<2 per 100 000
2 to <10 per 100 000
New diagnoses per 100 000 population
European region: 18.2 per 100 000
50.2
2.9 6.2
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Estimated new HIV infections are decreasing globally
1.400.000
1.600.000
1.800.000
2.000.000
2.200.000
2.400.000
2.600.000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Nu
mb
er
of
new
dia
gno
ses
(glo
bal
)
Year of diagnosis
Global
Source: ECDC/WHO (2016). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe, 2015. UNAIDS/WHO global estimates.
Global
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Estimated new HIV infections are decreasing globally, but increasing in the WHO European Region
0
20.000
40.000
60.000
80.000
100.000
120.000
140.000
160.000
180.000
1.400.000
1.600.000
1.800.000
2.000.000
2.200.000
2.400.000
2.600.000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Nu
mb
er
new
dia
gno
ses
(Eu
rop
ean
re
gio
n)
Nu
mb
er
of
new
dia
gno
ses
(glo
bal
)
Year of diagnosis
Global
WHO European Region
Source: ECDC/WHO (2016). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe, 2015. UNAIDS/WHO global estimates.
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Estimated new HIV infections are decreasing globally, but increasing in the WHO European Region
0
20.000
40.000
60.000
80.000
100.000
120.000
140.000
160.000
180.000
1.400.000
1.600.000
1.800.000
2.000.000
2.200.000
2.400.000
2.600.000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
WHO European Region
Global
East
West
Centre
Source: ECDC/WHO (2016). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe, 2015. UNAIDS/WHO global estimates.
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HIV diagnoses, Eastern Europe
IDU-driven epidemic, with increasing heterosexual transmission
Heterosexual +100%
Injecting drug use
-39%
Sex between men +800%
Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
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HIV diagnoses, Central Europe
MSM/heterosexual-transmission driven epidemic
Sex between men +189%
Heterosexual +74%
Injecting drug use
+35%
Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
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Source: ECDC/WHO (2015). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe, 2014
Data is adjusted for reporting delay. Cases from Estonia and Poland excluded due to incomplete reporting on transmission mode during the period; cases from Italy and Spain excluded due to increasing national coverage over the period.
Source: ECDC/WHO (2016). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe, 2015
MSM are the only group where infections have increased, however….
HIV diagnoses, Western Europe
Heterosexual
-40%
Injecting drug use
-56%
Sex between men
+11% (to 2015)
Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
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Reported HIV transmission modes in the EU/EEA, 2016
Unknown mode of transmission is excluded from proportions presented here.
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New HIV diagnoses in men, by age group, EU-EEA, 2007-2016
Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
15-19 years
20-24 years
25-29 years
30-39 years
40-49 years
50+ years
Data is adjusted for reporting delay
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New HIV diagnoses in women, by age group, EU-EEA, 2007-2016
Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
15-19 years
20-24 years
25-29 years
30-39 years
40-49 years
50+ years
Data is adjusted for reporting delay
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Proportion of HIV diagnoses in migrants, EU/EEA, 2007-2016
Migrants are an important group for HIV prevention and testing in many European countries
Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
40%
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Are migrants infected with HIV prior to or after arrival to Europe?
Source: Rice BD, Elford J, Yin Z et al (2012). A new method to assign country of HIV infection among heterosexuals born abroad and diagnosed with HIV in the UK. AIDS 26 (15): 1961-6
Post-migration HIV acquisition was 63% 72% among MSM
58 and 51% in heterosexual men and women, respectively 71% for Latin America and Caribbean migrants
45% for people from sub-Saharan Africa
Source: Alvarez-del Arco et al AIDS 2017
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Are migrants infected with HIV prior to or after arrival to Europe?
18%
Source: Rice BD, Elford J, Yin Z et al (2012). A new method to assign country of HIV infection among heterosexuals born abroad and diagnosed with HIV in the UK. AIDS 26 (15): 1961-6
24%
7%
Clinic-based estimate CD4-based estimate
46%
Source: Rice BD, Elford J, Yin Z et al (2012). A new method to assign country of HIV infection among heterosexuals born abroad and diagnosed with HIV in the UK. AIDS 26 (15): 1961-6
Why is this important?
Screening newly arrived migrants at point of entry is not enough
Some sub-populations of migrants are at-risk for HIV acquisition many years after arrival to Europe
Countries should develop and deliver targeted primary HIV prevention programmes to migrant populations at risk
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• What is the epidemiology of HIV in the European Region?
• Is the European response sufficient?
• What are our challenges and opportunities in the decade ahead?
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Sustainable Development Goals and UNAIDS “Fast-track commitments”
Goals for Europe and Central Asia √ To reduce new HIV infections to fewer than 63 080 by
2020
√ To reduce AIDS-related death √ To eliminate HIV-related stigma and discrimination by 2020
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Will we make it?
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
160000
180000
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
New
HIV
dia
gno
ses
Year
HIV Region 2020 target
HIV EU/EEA 2020 target
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Fast Track Targets by 2020
73%
of all people living with HIV
VIRALLY
SUPPRESSED
=
Target 1 Target 2 Target 3 Target 4
diagnosed with HIV
ON ART
living with HIV
DIAGNOSED
on ART
VIRALLY SUPPRESSED
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% PLHIV who are diagnosed
Source: ECDC. Thematic report: HIV continuum of care. Monitoring implementation of the Dublin Declaration on Partnership to Fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia: 2017 progress report. Stockholm: ECDC; 2017.
>90%
80-90%
<50%
60-69%
70-79%
No/incomplete data
50-59%
Target 90%
West 84%
Centre 84%
East 57%
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Testing: Too many people living with HIV are diagnosed late
*CD4<350 at diagnosis
51%
Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
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Persons with CD4 cell count <350 mm3 at HIV diagnosis, by European sub-region
Source: ECDC/WHO Europe (2016). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe, 2015
East
West
Centre
Source: ECDC/WHO (2017). HIV/AIDS Surveillance in Europe 2017– 2016 data
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Decreasing estimated time from infection to diagnosis in the EU/EEA
Source: van Sighem, Eurosurveillance, Accepted
Median time from infection to diagnosis
is 2.9 years
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Fast Track Targets by 2020
73%
of all people living with HIV
VIRALLY
SUPPRESSED
=
Target 1 Target 2 Target 3 Target 4
diagnosed with HIV
ON ART
living with HIV
DIAGNOSED
on ART
VIRALLY SUPPRESSED
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Proportion of diagnosed PLHIV on ART Target 90%
Source: ECDC. Thematic report: HIV continuum of care. Monitoring implementation of the Dublin Declaration on Partnership to Fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia: 2017 progress report. Stockholm: ECDC; 2017; Pokrovskaya, HIV Glasgow, 2014
>90%
West 88%
Centre 69%
East 45%
80-89%
<50%
50-59%
60-69%
No/incomplete data
60-72%
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Policies on ART initiation in European countries 2014 (n=48)
2015
Source: ECDC. HIV treatment and care. Stockholm: ECDC; 2017.
4
29
15
10 28
8
1
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
2014 2016
Nu
mb
er o
f co
un
trie
s/A
RT
po
licy
200 cells/mm3
350 cells/mm3
500 cells/mm3
Initiation regardlessof CD4 count
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Policies on ART initiation in European countries 2014 (n=48)
2015
Source: ECDC. HIV treatment and care. Stockholm: ECDC; 2017.
4
29
15
10 28
8
1
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
2014 2016
Nu
mb
er o
f co
un
trie
s/A
RT
po
licy
200 cells/mm3
350 cells/mm3
500 cells/mm3
Initiation regardlessof CD4 count
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Policies on ART initiation in European countries 2014 (n=48) and 2016 (n=47)
2015
Source: ECDC. HIV treatment and care. Stockholm: ECDC; 2017.
4
29
15
10 28
8
1
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
2014 2016
Nu
mb
er o
f co
un
trie
s/A
RT
po
licy
200 cells/mm3
350 cells/mm3
500 cells/mm3
Initiation regardlessof CD4 count
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Availability of ART for undocumented migrants, 2016
Source: ECDC. From Dublin to Rome: ten years of responding to HIV in Europe and Central Asia: Stockholm, ECDC; 2014
Source: ECDC. HIV and migrants. Monitoring implementation of the Dublin Declaration on Partnership to Fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia: 2017 progress report Stockholm: ECDC; 2017.
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Fast Track Targets by 2020
73%
of all people living with HIV
VIRALLY
SUPPRESSED
=
Target 1 Target 2 Target 3 Target 4
diagnosed with HIV
ON ART
living with HIV
DIAGNOSED
on ART
VIRALLY SUPPRESSED
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Estimated % PLHIV who are virally supressed
Source: ECDC. Thematic report: HIV continuum of care. Monitoring implementation of the Dublin Declaration on Partnership to Fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia: 2017 progress report. Stockholm: ECDC; 2017; Pokrovskaya, HIV Glasgow, 2014
>73%
65-72%
<30%
43-30%
44-54%
No/incomplete data
55-64%
Target needed 90%
UNAIDS target 73%
EU/EEA 65%
Non-EU 24%
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• What is the epidemiology of HIV in the European Region?
• Is the European response sufficient?
• What are our challenges and opportunities in the decade ahead?
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• What is the epidemiology of HIV in the European Region?
• Is the European response sufficient?
• What are our challenges and opportunities in the decade ahead?
…….Implementing what we already know works!
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Despite decades of evidence, harm reduction coverage remains low in parts of Europe
Opiate substitution treatment coverage
Needle and syringe programme coverage
Source: European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (2016), Drug-related infectious diseases in Europe. Update from the EMCDDA expert network, November 2016. Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg.
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More frequent testing and rapid linkage to ART
Source: Brown et al, Eurosurveillance 2017
32% decrease in London infections linked to increased testing, immediate ART, PrEP
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Implementation of community-based testing by trained medical staff in Europe and Central Asia
Source: Dublin monitoring data 2016
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Implementation of community-based testing by non-medical staff in Europe and Central Asia
Source: Dublin monitoring data 2016
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Implementation of home sampling in Europe and Central Asia
Source: Dublin monitoring data 2016
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Harnessing new technologies
European Testing Week
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Mobile optimised HIV Test Finder
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EU Test Finder stats
European HIV Testing Week 18-25 Nov 2016
Visits Page views
Friday 18-Nov 4 958 10 821
Saturday 19-Nov 20 640 39 600
Sunday 20-Nov 4 918 9 348
Monday 21-Nov 1 885 3 244
Tuesday 22-Nov 8 300 17 152
Wednesday 23-Nov 9 992 23 414
Thursday 24-Nov 6 463 12 875
Friday 25-Nov 8 458 18 218
Total: 65 614 134 672
63% 81%
Push messages sent to millions of users in
55 countries in 40 languages
Banner ads displayed to users in EU
countries (250K impressions)
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Status of formal PrEP implementation in Europe (as per October 2017)
ECDC. Evidence brief: Pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV prevention in Europe. Stockholm: ECDC; 2016. (updated)
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Hornet/ECDC survey on PrEP
(2017)
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Are you currently taking PrEP?
98% 90%
No
Yes
10%
90%
n= 10,562 (excludes HIV-positive respondents and non-responders)
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Where did you obtain PrEP?
39%
14%
27%
14%
6%
Physician
Research study
Internet
Friend
PEP
n= 726
47% Informally using PrEP
PEP=post-exposure prophylaxis for HIV
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0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Condom + Healthpromotion
+ STI services + PEP + PrEP
Nr
of
cou
ntr
ies
rep
ort
ing
Combination prevention cascade: European countries with multiple interventions for MSM in place
Source: ECDC. The status of the HIV response in the European union/European Economic Area, 2016. Stockholm. ECDC: 2017.
Most European countries are not implementing a comprehensive
approach to prevention for MSM
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2 out of 3 countries report that funds available for HIV prevention are insufficient to reduce the number of new HIV infections
Source: ECDC. The status of the HIV response in the European Union/European Economic Area, 2016. Stockholm. ECDC: 2017.
Funding for HIV prevention
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EU LGBT Survey; European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA); 2013
Proportion of gay male respondents who state that no medical staff/health care provider is aware that they are gay.
Stigma
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Additional factors that will affect our work in the coming decade
• Political instability, austerity
• Health care system re-structuring
• Migration
• Aging cohort of PLHIV
• Changes in illicit drug markets and patterns of use
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Conclusions
• Europe, as a region, is lagging behind in its response to the HIV epidemic and is not on track to reach the 2020 targets
• Effective interventions exist --frequent testing, immediate linkage to care and ART initiation, PrEP– but are not being applied at scale in many European countries.
• There is good news! Reduced incidence in MSM and heterosexuals in select countries, overall reduction in MTCT and IDU
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Thank you! Teymur Noori (ECDC)
Annemarie Stengaard (WHO Regional Office for Europe)
Dublin Declaration Advisory Group Irene Rueckerl (Austria), Florence Lot, Daniela Rojas Castro, Richard Stranz (France), Gesa Kupfer (Germany), Derval Igoe (Ireland), Lella Cosmaro (Italy), Silke David, Eline Op De Coul (Netherlands), Arild Johan Myrberg (Norway), Olivia Castillo (Spain), Maria Axelsson (Sweden), Valerie Delpech, Alison Brown, Cary James, Brian Rice (United Kingdom), Velina Pendalovska (European Commission), Klaudia Palczak and Dagmar Hedrich (EMCDDA), Taavi Erkkola, Kim Marsh (UNAIDS) and Annemarie Steengard (WHO Regional Office for Europe).
Dublin Declaration Focal Points in Europe and Central Asia Roland Bani (Albania), Montse Gessé (Andorra), Samvel Grigoryan (Armenia), Irene Rueckerl, Bernhard Benka, Robert Zangerle (Austria), Esmira Almammadova (Azerbaijan), Inna Karabakh (Belarus), Andre Sasse, Dominique Van Beckhoven (Belgium), Šerifa Godinjak (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Tonka Varleva (Bulgaria), Jasmina Pavlic (Croatia), Ioannis Demetriades (Cyprus), Veronika Šikolová, Hana Janatova (Czech Republic), Jan Fouchard (Denmark), Kristi Rüütel, Liilia Lõhmus, Anna-Liisa Pääsukene (Estonia), Henrikki Brummer-Korvenkontio (Finland), Bernard Faliu (France), Tamar Kikvidze (Georgia), Gesa Kupfer, Ulrich Marcus, (Germany), Vasileia Konte, Chryssoula Botsi, Jenny Kremastinou, Theodoros Papadimitriou (Greece), Katalin Szalay (Hungary), Guðrún Sigmundsdóttir (Iceland), Derval Igoe (Ireland), Daniel Chemtob (Israel), Maria Grazia Pompa, Anna Caraglia, Barbara Suligoi, Laura Camoni, Stefania D’Amato, Anna Maria Luzi, Anna Colucci, Marco Floridia, Alessandra Cerioli, Lella Cosmaro, Massimo Oldrini, Laura Rancilio, Maria Stagnitta, Michele Breveglieri, Margherita Errico (Italy), Irina Ivanovna Petrenko (Kazakhstan), Laura Shehu, Pashk Buzhala, Bajram Maxhuni (Kosovo*), Dzhainagul Baiyzbekova (Kyrgyzstan), Šarlote Konova (Latvia), Irma Caplinskiene (Lithuania), Patrick Hoffman (Luxembourg), Jackie Maistre Melillo (Malta), Violeta Teutu (Moldova), Aleksandra Marjanovic (Montenegro), Silke David (Netherlands), Arild Johan Myrberg (Norway), Iwona Wawer, Piotr Wysocki, Adam Adamus (Poland), Antonio Diniz, Teresa Melo (Portugal), Mariana Mardarescu (Romania), Danijela Simic, Sladjana Baros (Serbia), Peter Truska (Slovakia), Irena Klavs (Slovenia), Olivia Castillo (Spain), Maria Axelsson (Sweden), Stefan Enggist, Axel Schmidt (Switzerland), Muratboky Beknazarov (Tajikistan), Nurcan Ersöz (Turkey), Valerie Delpech (United Kingdom), Igor Kuzin (Ukraine) and Zulfiya Abdurakhimova (Uzbekistan).
HIV Surveillance Focal Points in the EU/EEA Daniela Schmid, Alexander Spina (Austria), Andre Sasse (Belgium), Tonka Varleva (Bulgaria), Tatjana Nemeth Blazic (Croatia); Maria Koliou (Cyprus), Marek Maly (Czech Republic); Susan Cowan (Denmark), Kristi Ruutel (Estonia), Kirsi Liitsola (Finland), Florence Lot (France), Barbara Gunsenheimer-Bartmeyer (Germany), Georgios Nikolopoulos and Dimitra Paraskeva (Greece), Maria Dudas (Hungary), Gudrun Sigmundsdottir and Haraldur Briem (Iceland), Kate O’Donnell and Derval Igoe (Ireland), Barbara Suligoi (Italy), Šarlote Konova (Latvia), Saulius Čaplinskas and Irma Čaplinskienė (Lithuania), : Jean-Claude Schmit (Luxembourg), Jackie Maistre Melillo and Tanya Melillo (Malta), Eline Op de Coul (Netherlands), Hans Blystad (Norway), Magdalena Rosinska (Poland), Helena Cortes Martins (Portugal), Mariana Mardarescu (Romania), Peter Truska (Slovakia), Irena Klavs (Slovenia), Asuncion Diaz (Spain), Maria Axelsson (Sweden), Valerie Delpech (United Kingdom).
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