| Literature DB >> 25987851 |
James Wilton1, Heather Senn2, Malika Sharma3, Darrell Hs Tan4.
Abstract
Despite significant efforts, the rate of new HIV infections worldwide remains unacceptably high, highlighting the need for new HIV prevention strategies. HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a new approach that involves the ongoing use of antiretroviral medications by HIV-negative individuals to reduce the risk of HIV infection. The use of daily tenofovir/emtricitabine as oral PrEP was found to be effective in multiple placebo-controlled clinical trials and approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the United States and the World Health Organization have both released guidelines recommending the offer of oral PrEP to high-risk populations. The scale-up of PrEP is underway, but several implementation questions remain unanswered. Demonstration projects and open-label extensions of placebo-controlled trials are ongoing and hope to contribute to our understanding of PrEP use and delivery outside the randomized controlled trial setting. Evidence is beginning to emerge from these open-label studies and will be critical for guiding PrEP scale-up. Outside of such studies, PrEP uptake has been slow and several client- and provider-related barriers are limiting uptake. Maximizing the public health impact of PrEP will require rollout to be combined with interventions to promote uptake, support adherence, and prevent increases in risk behavior. Additional PrEP strategies are currently under investigation in placebo-controlled clinical trials and may be available in the future.Entities:
Keywords: HIV prevention; biomedical intervention; emtricitabine; tenofovir
Year: 2015 PMID: 25987851 PMCID: PMC4422285 DOI: 10.2147/HIV.S50025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HIV AIDS (Auckl) ISSN: 1179-1373
Summary of completed PrEP RCTs
| Study name | Population | Location | Intervention | Overall reduction in HIV risk | Proportion with detectable drug in blood | Risk reduction among consistent users |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPrEX | MSM and transgender women (n=2,499) | Peru, Ecuador, Thailand, US, South Africa, Brazil | Daily oral TDF/FTC | 44% (95% CI: 15%–63%) | 51% | 92% among participants with detectable drug in blood |
| Partners PrEP | Heterosexual serodiscordant couples (n=4,578) | Kenya and Uganda | Daily oral TDF/FTC; daily oral TDF | TDF: 67% (95% CI: 44%–81%) TDF/FTC: 75% (95% CI: 55%–87%) | 82% | 86% (TDF) and 90% (TDF/FTC) among participants with detectable drug in blood |
| TDF2 | Heterosexual men and women (n=1,219) | Botswana | Daily oral TDF/FTC | 62% (95% CI: 22%–83%) | 80% | 78% among participants who refilled PrEP in the last 30 days |
| Bangkok Tenofovir Study | People who use injection drugs (n=2,413) | Thailand | Daily oral TDF | 49% (95% CI: 10%–72%) | 67% | 70% among participants with detectable drug in blood |
| FEM-PrEP | Women (n=2,120) | Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania | Daily oral TDF/FTC | 6% (95% CI: −52% to 41%) | 24% | NA |
| VOICE | Women (n=5,029) | Uganda, South Africa, Zimbabwe | Daily oral TDF; daily oral TDF/FTC; daily TDF vaginal gel | TDF: −49% (95% CI: −129% to 3%) | 30% | 66% among participants with detectable drug in blood (TDF gel arm) |
| CAPRISA 004 | Women (n=889) | South Africa | TDF vaginal gel used before and after sex | 39% (95% CI: 6%–60%) | NA | 74% among participants with high vaginal drug concentrations |
Abbreviations: PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; RCTs, randomized controlled trials; MSM, men who have sex with men; n, number; TDF, tenofovir; FTC, emtricitabine; CI, confidence interval; NA, not available.
Summary of planned and ongoing demonstration projects evaluating “open label” use of daily oral TDF/FTC
| Study details | Population(s) | Location(s) | Study design | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The US Demonstration Project, NCT01632995 | MSM (n=600) | United States (San Francisco, CA; Miami, FL; Washington, DC) | PrEP offered to patients at two STD clinics and a community health center. | 2012–2015 |
| CRUSH, NCT02183909 | Young MSM of color aged 18–29 years (n=670) | United States (Oakland, CA) | Evaluating a set of evidence-based interventions to address the sexual health of young MSM of color by enhancing activities at a youth clinic. | 2013–2017 |
| PATH-PrEP, NCT01781806 | MSM (n=375) | United States (Los Angeles, CA) | Evaluating the addition of PEP or PrEP to a CPP. Program stratifies participants into two cohorts based on risk: 1) high-risk cohort (CPP includes PrEP); 2) low/moderate-risk cohort (CPP includes PEP). Using an escalating-intensity adherence intervention based on real-time serum drug levels. | 2013–2017 |
| CCTG 595, NCT01761643 | MSM (n=400) | United States (Long Beach, Los Angeles, and San Diego, CA) | Evaluating a text message-based adherence intervention (iTAB) using a controlled, randomized study design. | 2013–2016 |
| PrEPared and Strong (P&S), NCT02167386 | Black MSM (n=200) | United States (New York, NY) | Evaluating an enhanced adherence intervention (peer navigators, text message reminders) using a controlled, randomized study design. | 2014–2017 |
| PrEPare, NCT01632397 | MSM (n=55) | United States (Boston, MA) | Evaluating adherence interventions using a two-arm, randomized study design (cognitive–behavioral-based adherence intervention versus health education with supportive counseling). Primarily a feasibility pilot randomized controlled trial. | 2011–2014 |
| SPARK, NCT02037594 | MSM (n=445) | United States (New York, NY) | A randomized, four-arm study evaluating interventions to enhance uptake and adherence. | 2014–2017 |
| Project PrEPare, NCT01772823 and NCT01769456 | Young MSM aged 15–17 years (n=100) and 18–22 years (n=200) | United States | Enrolling youth from Adolescent Medicine Trial Units. Comparing two risk-reduction interventions: 1) Many Men, Many Voices (3MV); 2) personalized cognitive counseling. Assignment to intervention will occur at the site-level. | 2012–2016 |
| HPTN 073, NCT01808352 | Black MSM (n=225) | United States (Los Angeles, CA; Washington, DC; Chapel Hill, NC) | Using a Client Centered Care Coordination (C4) model to deliver PrEP. | 2013–2015 |
| SHIPP, NCT02074891 | MSM, IDU, heterosexual men and women (n=1,200) | United States (Chicago, IL; Newark, NJ; Philadelphia, PA; Houston, TX) | A health services implementation study at four federally qualified health centers. Measuring outcomes related to costs and clinical practice variation. | 2014–2017 |
| PrEPARATORY-5, NCT02149888 | MSM (n=50) | Canada (Toronto, ON) | Evaluating an adherence intervention (using a before/after study design) administered through a local community-based organization. | 2014–2015 |
| VicPrEP | MSM and heterosexual men and women (n=200) | Australia (Melbourne, VIC) | PrEP will be offered to 100 participants. Another 100 who decide to not take PrEP will also be followed. | 2014–2018 |
| PRELUDE, NCT02206555 | MSM and heterosexual men and women (n=400) | Australia (New South Wales) | – | 2014–2016 |
| PROUD, NCT02065986 | MSM (n=500) | United Kingdom (London) | Participants will be randomized to 1) start PrEP immediately, or 2) defer PrEP initiation for 12 months (note: deferred arm was discontinued in 2014 due to high effectiveness). | 2012–2016 |
| Benin Demo Project, NCT02237027 | Female sex workers (n=250) | Benin (Cotonou) | Integrating treatment as prevention and PrEP into a combination prevention package. Plans to develop and evaluate an education adherence program. | 2014–2016 |
| PrEP-India, NCT02148094 | Female and transgender sex workers (n=2,000) | India (Mysore, Kolkata) | Comparing two approaches to PrEP delivery: 1) peer educator home visits every other day; 2) weekly clinic pick-up. Plans to design and evaluate a risk assessment tool. | 2014–2016 |
| CHAMPS, NCT02213328 | Young heterosexual men and women aged 15–19 years (n=150) | South Africa | Every 12 weeks, participants offered the following options: to continue PrEP, to stop PrEP but continue in the study, or to restart PrEP if previously stopped. | 2014–2016 |
| MP3-Youth, NCT01571128 | Young men and women aged 15–24 years (n=1,320) | Kenya (Kisumu, Nairobi) | Evaluating a sex-specific combination HIV prevention package for youth. Using a mobile delivery approach to PrEP provision. Only women are being offered PrEP. | 2014–2016 |
| Sibanye Health Project, NCT02043015 | MSM (n=200) | South Africa (Cape Town, Port Elizabeth) | Evaluating a combination package of biomedical, behavioral, and community-level prevention interventions for MSM. | 2014–2015 |
| PrEPBrasil, NCT01989611 | MSM (n=400) | Brazil (Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro) | – | 2014–2016 |
| PARTNERS demonstration Project | Serodiscordant heterosexual couples (n=1,000) | Kenya, Uganda | Evaluating delivery of treatment for prevention and PrEP. PrEP offered as a “bridge” to ART use and is discontinued once HIV-positive partner starts ART. | 2012–2015 |
Notes: Transgender women are eligible to participate in the majority of studies enrolling MSM. Unless otherwise specified, participants must be 18 years or older to meet eligibility criteria. Data from http://www.clinicaltrials.gov, http://vicprep.csrh.org105 and http://depts.washington.edu/uwicrc.104
Abbreviations: TDF, tenofovir; FTC, emtricitabine; MSM, men who have sex with men; n, number; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; STD, sexually transmitted disease; PEP, postexposure prophylaxis; CPP, customized prevention package; iTAB, individual Texting for Adherence Building; IDU, intravenous drug users; ART, antiretroviral therapy.
Figure 1Truvadawhore T-shirt.