| Literature DB >> 28727818 |
Antonio Di Biagio1, Niccolò Riccardi1, Alessio Signori2, Renato Maserati3, Silvia Nozza4, Andrea Gori5, Stefano Bonora6, Marco Borderi7, Diego Ripamonti8, Maria Cristina Rossi9, Giancarlo Orofino10, Tiziana Quirino11, Giuseppe Nunnari12, Benedetto Maurizio Celesia13, Salvatore Martini14, Caterina Sagnelli14, Giovanni Mazzola15, Pietro Colletti15, Dario Bartolozzi16, Teresa Bini17, Nicoletta Ladisa18, Filippo Castelnuovo19, Annalisa Saracino18, Sergio Lo Caputo18.
Abstract
Several studies have demonstrated the efficacy of the oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with tenofovir (with or without emtricitabine) on preventing HIV-negative partners of HIV infected patients to become infected through sexual contacts. PrEP is already available in the United States and now is approved by European Medicine Agency. In this setting we would like to gauge physicians' knowledge, acquaintance with and attitude to include PrEP in their clinical practice. A cross sectional survey was conducted among Italian physicians expert on antiretroviral therapy. Out of 146 physicians, 35% of participants declared to be familiar with PrEP but only 46% of them believed that, currently, there are not enough reasons to make it available in Italy. 51% of physicians have already been attracted to prescribe it and 63.4% have been openly asked about PrEP. The main concerns noticed were: the risk of acquire other sexual transmitted diseases (STDs) (70% of physicians feared that PrEP could favor STDs spread), the potential harmful of PrEP if not adequately implemented and, especially the risk of possible side effects if not properly used. Nevertheless, 55.9% of participants believed that Health Authorities face an ethical obligation to make PrEP available as part of the strategies to protect from HIV transmission and half of the respondents asked for further researches to better define the role for PrEP. Attitudes regarding PrEP impact on Italian National Health Organization were also very interesting: 57.5% of participants did not believe that investing in PrEP would be an appropriate use of healthcare resources, while 70.6% affirmed that PrEP's financial coverage should not be funded by the Italian National System of Health (SSN). This survey showed a high awareness of PrEP potential among Italian physicians coupled with a great deal of skepticism about how and if implementing it in clinical practice.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28727818 PMCID: PMC5519091 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Completed trials of PrEP.
| STUDY NAME | POPULATION | LOCATION | INTERVENTION | OVERAL REDUCTION IN HIV | PROPORTION WITH DETECTABLE DRUG IN BLOOD | RISK REDUCTION AMONG CONSISTENT USERS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSM and transgender woman (n = 2499) | Brazil, Kenya, Peru, Ecuador, South Africa, Thailand, Uganda and US | Daily oral TDF/FTC | 44% (95% CI: 15–63%) | 51% | 92% among participants with detectable drug in blood | |
| Heterosexual serodiscordant couples (n = 4578) | 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 | |
| Heterosexual men and woman (n = 1219) | Botswana | Daily oral TDF/FTC | 62% (95% CI:22%-83%) | 80% | 78% among participants who refilled PrEP in the last 30 days | |
| People who use injection drugs (n = 2413) | Thailand | Daily oral TDF | 49% (95% CI: 10%-72%) | 67% | 70% among participants with detectable drug in blood | |
| Women (n = 2120) | Kenya, South Africa and Tanzania | Daily oral TDF/FTC | 6% (95% CI: -52% to 41%) | 24% | NA | |
| Women (n = 5029) | South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe | Daily oral TDF, daily oral TDF/FTC, daily TDF vaginal gel | TDF: -49% (95% CI:-129% to 3%); TDF/FTC: -4% (95% CI: -49% to 27%); TDF gel: -15% (95% CI: -20% to 40%) | 30% | 66% among participants with detectable drug in blood (TDF gel arm) | |
| MSM (n = 545) | UK | TDF/FTC daily | 86% (90% CI: 58%-96%) | |||
| MSM (n = 414) | France and Canada | TDF/FTC 2 to 24 hours before sex, followed by a third pill 24 hours after the first drug intake and a fourth pill 24 hours later | 86% (95% CI, 40%- 98%) | 86% for TDF and 82% for FTC in the first 113 patients enrolled |
Fig 1Number of new HIV diagnosis and mode of transmission of HIV in different years [26].