For the first time,
a study shows that a drug used to treat HIV infection also can help prevent it
when taken before and after risky sex by gay men.
The results offer hope of a more
appealing way to help prevent the disease beyond taking daily pills and using
condoms, although those methods are still considered best.
The study, done in France and
Canada, is the first to test "on demand" use of Truvada, a pill
combining two AIDS drugs, by people planning to have risky sex.
The uninfected
men who took it were 86 percent less likely to get HIV compared to men given
dummy pills.
Daily Truvada pills are used now to
prevent HIV infection in people at high risk for it, and studies show the drug
helps even when some doses are skipped.
Health officials have been leery of billing it as a
"chemical condom" out of fear that people will not use the best
prevention methods, but many won't use condoms all the time or take daily
pills.
The study of Gilead Science's Truvada was led by the French
national HIV research agency.
Men were given fake or real Truvada
and told to take two pills from two to 24 hours before sex, a third pill 24
hours later, and a fourth pill 48 hours after the first dose. The men also were
given condoms and disease prevention counseling.
The study was stopped early, in
November, after 400 men were enrolled and researchers saw that the drug was
working; there were two new HIV infections among those on Truvada and 14 in
those on dummy pills. The two infections in the Truvada group were in men who
stopped using the pills after more than a year in the study.
The drug was safe, but nausea and
diarrhea were more frequent among men who used it. Only one stopped using it
because of side effects.
AIDS specialists all over the USA
called the results exciting but warned that it can't be assumed they would
apply to male-female sex, because different types of sex expose partners to
differing amounts of virus.
The U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention still recommends daily Truvada pills for prevention, and
many men in the French study ended up taking them nearly that often because of
how frequently they had sex.
"We need all the options we
can get" for preventing HIV infection. "People choose different
prevention methods. What we want is for them to choose effective ones and to
use them regularly."
One advocate for wider use of prevention
pills - Damon Jacobs, a New York City psychotherapist - agreed.
For years, the public health
message was "condoms only, condoms only, condoms only. People are having
sex for pleasure" and need alternate ways to reduce their risk.
A second study presented at the
conference by the U.K. Medical Research Council found that daily use of Truvada
cut the risk of infection by 86 percent in a "real world" test of gay
men aware they were taking Truvada for HIV prevention.
Researchers assigned 545 gay men to
get Truvada right away or a year later.
The study was stopped in October after
HIV infections occurred in only three men given Truvada but in 19 of those
assigned to get it after a year.
As in the French study, rates of
other sexually spread diseases were similar in both groups, leading researchers
to conclude that use of the prevention pills was not increasing risky behavior.
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