The science behind Truvada as pre-exposure
prophylaxis reveals an awesome tool that is apparently already helping
shrink U.S. HIV rates.
July 13, 2017
•
By
Benjamin Ryan
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The late aughts were a vexing time for HIV prevention in the United
States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated
that the virus’s overall annual transmission rate had remained stagnant
for nearly two decades. Diagnosis rates were rising among men who have
sex with men (MSM), who had become increasingly lax about condom use
since the introduction of effective antiretroviral (ARV) treatment for
HIV ended the crisis years of the epidemic in 1996.
It was high time for a game changer.
Along
came what is known as biomedical prevention of HIV. During the 2010s,
HIV prevention science has been dominated by the fact, proven with increasing clarity by a series of important studies,
that the medications used to treat the virus have a powerful capacity
to prevent its spread. To wit, HIV-positive individuals who maintain an
undetectable viral load thanks to ARVs have an extremely low risk of passing the virus to others; the risk may in fact be zero.
And then there’s pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). In 2010, researchers published
a landmark global study, known as iPrEx, detailing how HIV-negative MSM
at high risk for the virus could greatly reduce their risk of infection
with the virus by taking a powder-blue tablet called Truvada (tenofovir
disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine). (Truvada, which contains a pair of
ARVs, was approved in 2004 for use in combination with other ARVs to
treat HIV.) Ultimately, researchers would determine that good adherence
to the daily regimen among MSM lowered their chances of contracting HIV
by an estimated 99 percent or more.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) approved PrEP for high-risk groups on July 16,
2012. But despite Truvada’s awesome potential to help send into retreat
the scourge of HIV among MSM in particular—an estimated
70 percent of all new infections occur among this population—PrEP hit
the scene with barely a whisper. Few sought out Truvada, and overall
awareness remained minimal.
The tide began to turn in the fall of 2013 when a series of media outlets
began asking why so few gay men were taking such a potentially
transformative tool. The public attention helped open the floodgates,
and the uptake of Truvada as prevention has been steadily rising ever since.
According to Gilead Sciences, which manufactures Truvada, an
estimated 125,000 U.S. residents were on PrEP as of the first quarter of
2017. This is a remarkably robust figure given that a mere 22,000 were estimated to be on Truvada as prevention in early 2015.
Because
of the long lag time in the CDC’s reporting about HIV diagnoses and
estimated transmission rates—often the data are two to three years old
by the time they’re made public—getting a firm handle on how PrEP has
affected national HIV rates remains challenging.
A
major question is whether PrEP is making it into the hands of those most
at risk, where it can do the most good. Signs look promising. In 2015,
the CDC estimated
that 492,000 MSM (about a quarter of those 18 to 59 years old who don’t
have HIV) are likely at high enough risk for HIV to be good candidates
for PrEP. Meanwhile, data from Gilead suggest that the vast majority of PrEP users are MSM; and numerous other sources indicate that those who opt to go on PrEP do tend
to be at higher risk for the virus. So it’s likely that an increasingly
significant proportion of MSM at significant risk for HIV in the United
States are indeed taking Truvada, positioning the drug to avert a
considerable number of new infections.
PrEP use among MSM is particularly common in such cities as New York, San Francisco and Seattle, all of which have benefited from highly coordinated, localized efforts to promote PrEP among MSM.
San
Francisco in particular has experienced a plummeting HIV diagnosis rate
since 2012, a decline certainly tied to increasing treatment rates
among the local HIV population, but also likely to PrEP as well. The Kaiser Permanente Northern California PrEP program,
one of the largest in the nation, has data on a cumulative 6,000 years
of PrEP use among its members. Thus far, there have been only a small
handful of HIV transmissions among these individuals—cases limited to
those whose PrEP use was interrupted because they experienced a lapse in
insurance or temporarily dropped out of medical care with Kaiser. So
despite initial signs in trials of PrEP that MSM would likely not adhere
well to the daily drug regimen, this trove of real-world evidence
strongly suggests otherwise.
In February, the CDC released an exciting estimate
that overall U.S. HIV infection rates finally dropped 18 percent
between 2008 and 2014. Researchers at the federal agency pointed to the
effects of HIV treatment as prevention (TasP) as a likely major driver
of the drop and speculated that PrEP may have affected the decline seen
in 2014.
On the less promising side, the predominant users of PrEP appear to be white men over the age of 25. This means that Truvada use among those with the highest HIV risk—Black MSM, especially those under 25, maintain staggering rates of infection—remains
particularly disappointing. These racial differences in PrEP uptake
indicate that a tragic downside of the prevention pill is that it stands
poised to widen existing racial disparities in HIV transmission rates among MSM.
Addressing
such disparities, C. Bradley Hare, MD, the director of HIV care and
prevention at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in San Francisco, says
“Clearly, we’re still missing very high-risk populations. We’re not
penetrating into all the at-risk communities at the same levels we need
to really drive down the epidemic across all the different risk groups.”
To
follow is an overview of some of the most important scientific findings
about PrEP, including details about its effectiveness, the three known
cases of PrEP failure, and safety and side effects. There’s also the
thorny, controversial question of how starting Truvada affects
individuals’ level of sexual risk taking. And finally, we take a sneak
peek at future forms of PrEP. Click on the hyperlinks for more about any
of the research.
C. Bradley Hare addressing the 2016 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Boston Courtesy of Benjamin Ryan |
How Effective Is PrEP?
There are two ways of examining how well PrEP works: on an individual level and on a population level. The placebo-controlled iPrEx trial found
that the group of MSM who received PrEP had a 44 percent lower risk of
HIV than those in the group that got the placebo. In 2015, researchers
in the PROUD study
in the United Kingdom—designed to better reflect real-world use of
PrEP—announced that the group of MSM who received Truvada had an 86
percent lower HIV rate than those in the group assigned to wait and
receive Truvada on a deferred basis.
Evidence reported
in January 2017 suggested that the recent widespread practice among
HIV-negative London MSM of purchasing a generic version of Truvada
online—PrEP is not yet covered by the UK’s National Health Service
(NHS)—was likely a key driver of a 40 percent one-year drop in HIV diagnosis rates at four London sexual health clinics that diagnose one third of the nation’s new cases of the virus.
As
for how well PrEP works among individuals, its effectiveness is tied to
how well people adhere to the daily regimen. For MSM, researchers have
relied on mathematical modeling to estimate that taking Truvada daily is
associated with a 99 percent HIV risk reduction, four to six pills
weekly reduces risk by 96 percent, and two to three tablets weekly cuts
risk by 76 percent.
Safety
Importantly, researchers
have found that PrEP is not associated with any serious side effects,
specifically known as grade 3 or 4 adverse events. Truvada use can give
rise to two milder side effects in HIV-negative individuals, including
small reductions in kidney function and bone mineral density.
Two
decades of scientific research and clinical use inform clinicians’
knowledge of Truvada’s risks when used as treatment for HIV. But the
research community still lacks long-term safety data for the tablet’s
use among HIV-negative individuals because PrEP is relatively new on the
scientific scene and the follow-up time of clinical trials is limited.
In the meantime, one scientific paper reassuringly stated that short- or medium-term use of PrEP (up to five years) is as safe as aspirin.
Research
indicates that PrEP-prompted changes in kidney function are generally
reversible after an individual goes off Truvada. Additionally, Truvada
has not apparently been responsible for any permanent kidney injury in
HIV-negative individuals. And thanks to the recommended minimum of
twice-yearly kidney function tests that go along with a PrEP
prescription, clinicians can track any shifts that may be a cause for
worry, in particular among older individuals and those with health
conditions such as diabetes that may affect kidney health. (In two major
PrEP studies, nearly all cases of creatinine clearance decline—an
indication of reduced kidney function—occurred among those older than 40.)
PrEP may cause a modest decline in kidney function that is generally reversible after individuals stop taking Truvada Istock |
Thus far, Truvada use among HIV-negative individuals has not been
linked to any bone fractures. And as with kidney function reduction,
people who experience bone loss on PrEP will likely return to normal after stopping Truvada. Important questions do remain, however, about how Truvada may impede
the natural bone growth that adolescents and young adults experience
into their 20s and possibly lead to a lower bone density set point that
could raise the risk of fractures later in life.
Research
is currently under way to investigate ways to ward off bone problems
among people on Truvada, such as through vitamin D or calcium
supplements.
PrEP appears to pose a very low risk of prompting drug resistance
to either of the drugs in Truvada. For such an effect to occur, an
individual would need to contract the virus and then spend a period of
time taking Truvada while HIV positive, allowing the virus to mutate in
the presence of the medication. (The two drugs in Truvada are not
sufficient to effectively treat an HIV infection; at least an additional
third ARV is required.) In clinical trials of PrEP, only 0.5 percent of
participants developed drug resistance, mostly because they contracted
HIV shortly before starting PrEP (this group had a 37 percent chance of
developing drug resistance), leading them to test false negative for the
virus prior to going on Truvada.
Cases of PrEP Failure
Out of thousands of MSM who received PrEP in clinical trials,
there were no cases of anyone acquiring HIV when tests indicated they
were taking at least four tablets of Truvada per week. But the trials
were not necessarily large enough to allow for what turned out to be
such a rare outcome as a PrEP failure.
“If you looked
at 10 times the number of people, might you have had a few failures?”
says Kenneth Mayer, MD, medical research director at Fenway Health in
Boston, an important locus of PrEP research and clinical practice. “We
just don’t know.”
Thus far, in real-world practice
there have been three documented cases of gay men contracting HIV while
apparently adhering well to the daily PrEP regimen. The first two reported cases
are simpler to make sense of. Both involved MSM contracting rare,
highly drug-resistant strains of HIV that apparently evaded Truvada’s
protective effects. Multiple sources of evidence supported each of these
men’s claims that they were adherent to the daily Truvada regimen.
The third case
involved a gay man in Amsterdam who was also adherent to PrEP according
to multiple sources of evidence and who did not apparently contract a
drug-resistant HIV strain. The researchers behind the PrEP study in
which the man was a participant speculate that his “remarkably high”
level of sexual risk taking—during his first three months on PrEP he had
90 sexual partners and engaged in 100 acts of condomless anal sex—led
him to beat the odds in some way.
Elske Hoornenborg of the Public Health Service Amsterdam with her poster presentation on the Amsterdam PrEP failure case at CROI 2017 in Seattle Ben Ryan |
News of these three cases—the first story broke in February 2016—has
caused a firestorm of interest among MSM. But despite the voluminous
(and often acrimonious) nature of online chatter about these cases, they
remain quite rare in the grand scope of widespread PrEP use. And while
new cases will likely crop up with some regularity, there is every
reason to believe that proportionally such PrEP failures will remain
very uncommon.
That said, there is also reason to
presume that other cases of PrEP failure have fallen below the radar.
Each of the three known cases were reported by decidedly savvy
clinicians or researchers who knew what steps to take, including the
urgent need to order time-sensitive blood tests to ensure that a
substantial level of scientific proof supported their claim to have
discovered a case of true PrEP failure and not just an instance of HIV
acquisition in the context of poor adherence to PrEP.
In
Mayer’s words, the PrEP failure cases “show us that PrEP is not 100
percent protective.” However, he says, “I don’t feel like people should
reflexively say you have to use condoms when you take PrEP. But I think
for an informed consumer, if zero risk is key, then a ‘belt and
suspenders’ make sense. And if STIs [sexually transmitted infections]
are a concern, then again, condoms make sense.”
PrEP’s Role in Increased Sexual Risk Taking
PrEP
remains most controversial because of how it may affect sexual risk
taking among its users. Almost across the board, the trials of PrEP did not show
that starting Truvada was associated with evidence of increased sexual
risk taking—a phenomenon known as risk compensation—such as reported
declines in condom use rates or increased STI diagnosis rates.
However, a
French trial of the non-daily-dosing regimen of PrEP
reported in 2016 that when the participants switched from the placebo
phase of the study to the open-label phase (when they all knew they were
receiving Truvada), there was a significant drop in reported condom use. (For more information on what is sometimes known an intercourse-based PrEP protocol, click here.)
As for real-world data on PrEP-associated risk compensation, such
information is difficult to parse, given the multiple factors at play.
Such moving parts include long declining rates of condom use among MSM, already-rising STI rates among MSM and the frequent STI testing that is a part of a PrEP prescription, which may play a role in driving up diagnosis rates.
STI rates have long been rising among MSM in particular.Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/2015 STD Surveillance Report |
Voluminous anecdotal evidence has suggested a connection between PrEP
use and changes in sexual behavior in the MSM community; those with a
hookup app account in cities where PrEP is popular have likely witnessed
considerable recent changes in personal safer-sex policies among fellow
users. However, the major players in the PrEP research and clinical
community, buttressed by PrEP’s clinical trial data, have long resisted
acknowledging any such link. Their resistance is finally starting to
soften as experiences with and analyses of real-world use of PrEP grow
more detailed and nuanced.
Kaiser Permanente North
California has provided the richest data regarding risk compensation
effects among PrEP users. Researchers from the integrated health care
system recently published a report
on nearly 1,000 people who started PrEP through 2014 and were followed
for a cumulative 850 years through June 2015. They found that quarterly
rates of rectal gonorrhea and urethral chlamydia increased steadily in
the group and approximately doubled after one year.
A survey
of PrEP users at Kaiser’s San Francisco clinic, reported in late 2014,
found that about four in 10 said they used condoms less after starting
Truvada.
Fenway’s Kenneth Mayer Marilyn Humphries |
Mayer says he believes PrEP is contributing to increased sexual risk
taking among MSM but does not believe Truvada use is the primary cause
of such shifts.
“It’s safe to say that PrEP is
definitely increasing [STI] screening rates, and it’s attracting a group
of individuals who don’t want to use condoms,” Mayer says. “The
question is, how much were they not using condoms in the past? That’s
tricky. What I think is uncommon is somebody going into the clinic and
saying, ‘I’ve used condoms every single day of my life up until now and
today I’m ready to throw the condoms away.’”
“We’re
certainly seeing increased high risk behavior, less condom use, and PrEP
is one factor among others that is driving that, or contributing to
that,” says Kaiser’s Hare.
A billboard promoting PrEP in West Hollywood points provocatively to Truvada’s capacity to lessen anxieties about sex.Courtesy of the Los Angeles LGBT Center |
Whether or not PrEP causes a rise in STI rates, one thing is abundantly clear: PrEP use is associated
with very high STI rates. (All the more reason those taking PrEP
greatly benefit from the quarterly medical monitoring required to
maintain a prescription and the recommended minimum of twice-yearly STI
tests.) An analysis
of MSM using PrEP in Seattle found they had chlamydia and gonorrhea
rates more than 20 times that of the general MSM population. (The report
also found men reported using condoms less for receptive anal
intercourse during their first year on PrEP.) And a meta-analysis
of numerous studies of MSM that reported on STIs found that the rates
of new STI diagnoses among HIV-negative MSM on Truvada were 25 times
greater for gonorrhea, 11 times greater for chlamydia and 45 times
greater for syphilis, compared with the rates among MSM not on
PrEP. Kaiser’s San Francisco clinic reported in September 2015 that half
of all their patients on PrEP were diagnosed with at least one STI
during their first year on Truvada.
New Forms of PrEP
When
it comes to concerns about Truvada’s safety, efficacy or the ability of
at-risk populations to use PrEP successfully, it’s important to note
that the pale blue tablet is unlikely to remain the only player in the
PrEP game for long. Two major clinical trials already under way are
comparing new forms of PrEP with Truvada.
“We know that
Truvada is not going to be the answer for everybody,” says Hare. “So
we’re all looking for safer and different options for PrEP.”
One Phase III trial
will determine whether Gilead’s Descovy (emtricitabine/tenofovir
alafenamide) is as effective as Truvada in preventing HIV and whether it
is associated with fewer side effects. (Three clinical trial phases are
required before a treatment can gain approval.) Descovy contains an
updated version of the tenofovir disoproxil fumarate component of
Truvada that research in HIV-positive individuals indicates is safer for the bones and kidneys.
The FDA recently approved Descovy for use as a component of HIV treatment. |
A second Phase III study
is looking at a long-acting injectable form of PrEP: ViiV Healthcare’s
ARV cabotegravir, given every eight weeks. Such a new PrEP modality
could provide an excellent option to those who struggle with a daily
drug regimen.
Additionally, a Phase II trial is investigating intravenous infusions of a broadly neutralizing antibody known as VRC01 for use as PrEP.
Results
from the trials of Descovy, VRC01 and long-acting cabotegravir are
expected in 2019, 2020 and 2021 respectively. Further down the road, we
may see PrEP in the form of injectables requiring more widely spaced
dosing, a subdermal implant and a microbicidal enema.
In
the grand scope of the HIV epidemic, PrEP will ideally amount to a
vital stopgap measure. For now, as the U.S. public health, advocacy and
medical community strives to increase the proportion of the HIV
population on successful ARVs, people at risk for the virus can greatly
protect themselves by going on PrEP. Then, as the 2020s progress,
the number of people who have untreated HIV and are therefore
significantly infectious, will hopefully decline to such an extent that
the need for PrEP will increasingly wane.
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Benjamin Ryan is POZ’s editor at large, responsible for science coverage. Follow him on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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