However, this delay is not linked to an increased risk of drug resistance.
August 7, 2017
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People who take pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) after contracting the
virus may experience a delay before HIV tests detect the virus, Reuters
Health reports. However, this delay is not associated with an increased
risk of the virus developing resistance to the medications in Truvada
(tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, or TDF/emtricitabine).
Furthermore,
there is an apparent benefit to being on even just a partial
antiretroviral (ARV) treatment regimen during early infection: a
reduction in viral load, and therefore infectiousness, and a delay in
progression of very early HIV disease.
Standard HIV treatment requires three or more ARVs at a time to fully suppress the virus. Truvada contains only two ARVs.
Publishing their findings in the journal AIDS, researchers analyzed data from the Partners PrEP Study,
a randomized placebo-controlled trial conducted among men and women in
Kenya and Uganda, looking for those who had contracted HIV during the
trial. The participants were randomized to receive Truvada or Viread
(TDF) as PrEP or a placebo. This trial was conducted before researchers
determined that the two drugs in Truvada, emtricitabine and tenofovir
disoproxil fumerate, or TDF, were preferable for use as PrEP compared
with the one drug in Viread, TDF.
Scientists estimate
that when Truvada is taken daily it reduces the risk of contracting HIV
by 99 percent or more among men who have sex with men (MSM) and 90
percent or more among women. (The risk reduction for women may very well
be greater than 90 percent, but there isn’t sufficient research
available to refine the estimate.)
Some people entered
PrEP studies having contracted HIV very recently before enrolling and
therefore testing false negative before starting PrEP. (A negative HIV
test is required before starting PrEP.) Others likely adhered poorly to
the daily drug regimen or took no drug at all before contracging the
virus. In real-world practice, there have been three cases of individuals
contracting HIV—in two cases they contracted highly drug resistant
strains—while apparently adhering well to the PrEP regimen. These cases
all involved extenuating circumstances that collectively indicate such
cases of PrEP failure will likely remain rare.
Participants
in the Partners PrEP study were seen monthly and provided HIV rapid
testing along with a month’s supply of medication. Those whose rapid
tests indicated a positive or indeterminate result then received a more
sensitive third-generation EIA test for HIV at a local lab.
The
researchers stored plasma and serum samples from the participants at
their one- and three-month visits and then every three months after
that, as well as at any visit at which a rapid test indicated a possible
HIV infection. For those who contracted the virus, blood samples were
stored from the visit when they tested positive and then one month later
and quarterly after that.
Those who had a positive or
indeterminate result on their rapid HIV test were temporarily taken off
PrEP. If the EIA was positive, they were taken off PrEP permanently.
The
researchers defined a delay in detecting a new case of HIV as more than
100 days between an individual providing the first sample that
sensitive testing later identified was infected with the virus and the
first detection of the virus through a rapid test.
A
total of 138 people were confirmed to have contracted HIV during or just
before the study, including 71 in the placebo group and 67 in the
active PrEP arm, including 40 who received Viread and 27 who received
Truvada.
Fifteen of these individuals likely contracted
the virus just prior to entering the study, while 111 contracted the
virus during the study. Nine contracted the virus during a period when
for programmatic reasons they were off study drug and three contracted
the virus at the point when the placebo phase was canceled and everyone
was offered active PrEP.
Those who received active PrEP
were 3.49 times more likely to experience a delay in detection of their
infection. However, such a delay was not associated with an increased
risk of the virus developing resistance to the drugs in Truvada and
Viread.
The participants who took PrEP after
contracting HIV also progressed more slowly through the very early
stages of infection, known as the Fiebig stages. Hitting Fiebig stage V
took 28 days among those on PrEP compared with 17 days among those in
the placebo arm. After adjusting the data to account for differences in
Fiebig stages, the researchers found that individuals’ viral load was
about 88 percent lower (2/3 log) among those in the PrEP arm compared
with those in the placebo arm.
The researchers concluded that more sensitive HIV tests are necessary to detect infections earlier in people receiving PrEP.
A
major upside of taking Truvada as PrEP after contracting the virus is
that the drug will reduce a person’s viral load by as much as
1,000-fold, making him or her vastly less infectious.
At the recent 9th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Science in Paris (IAS 2017), researchers reported
a case study of a man who contracted the virus days before staring PrEP
who was put on a full HIV treatment regimen after seven days of Truvada
use. He was later taken off ARVs entirely and spent seven months in a
state of viral remission before his viral load rebounded and he was put
back on treatment for the virus.
To read the Reuters Health article, click here.
To read the study abstract, click here.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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