Known victims of AIDs will now be
able to make decisions that hugely lower the risk of infecting partners. It will not eliminate the risk but it is
another protocol that works in parallel with other strategies to lower the
infection rate. All this and actual stabilization
of the death rate opens the door to eventual eradication of the disease.
Rather obviously, persons at risk
for contracting the disease now have a defensive option that will possibly
block infection and in the process make it far more unlikely they become an
active carrier themselves.
The intelligent consumer can
plausibly eliminate this disease!
This puts us on the downward
slope of this disease.
One cheap pill protects healthy people from HIV
18:10 13 July 2011 by Andy Coghlan
For similar stories, visit the HIV and AIDS Topic Guide
A daily pill that costs just 25¢ can prevent both men and women from
catching HIV from partners carrying the virus.
The results, from two studies in Africa ,
provide unprecedented opportunities toprevent
the spread of HIV.
The first study, called the Partners PrEP, involved more than 9000 men and women and took
place at nine separate centres in Kenya
and Uganda .
Connie Celum at the University of Washington
in Seattle and colleagues recruited 4758 couples where one partner of each
couple was already infected with HIV. The uninfected partner took a daily
tablet of either anti-HIV drug tenofovir,
a combination of tenofovir and emtricitabine –
another anti-HIV drug – or a placebo.
Just 13 participants taking the combination drug, more commonly known
as Truvada, were infected, compared with 78 taking a placebo – a 73 per cent
reduction in risk.
Only 18 infections occurred in the group taking tenofovir, a 62 per
cent reduction in risk. Taken together, the drug recipients reduced their risk
of infection by 68 per cent compared with placebo takers.
"It's really exciting, just super," Cate Hankins, chief
scientific adviser toUNAIDS.
The results were similar to those from another trial, conducted jointly by the US Centers for Disease Control and
the Botswana Ministry of Health. In this study, 1200 HIV-negative, sexually
active people from Botswana
received either Truvada or a placebo daily. Over two years, only nine people
taking Truvada became infected, compared with 24 in the placebo group – a 63
per cent reduction in risk.
Both trials were halted prematurely because the results were so
impressive, making it unethical not to offer the treatment to those who had
received placebos.
The results from both studies are to be presented next week in Rome , Italy ,
at the International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis.
Good news for women
In each trial, men and women were equally protected, making these the
first studies to show that a daily pill can protect women as successfully as it
can men.
A trial last year showed that a vaginal gel containing tenofovir reduced
the risk of infection by 39 per cent in women, compared with an
inactive gel. But a trial in which Kenyan women received a tenofovir pill daily
was halted earlier this year after recipients seemed to be no better protected
than those on placebos.
Hankins says that the new studies revive hope that pills can protect
women after all.
Drugs for everyone
At this week's conference, delegates from UNAIDS, the World Health Organization
and CDC will also debate possible
changes to the WHO's current guidance on who should be offered
antiretroviral drugs.
In recent weeks, researchers have argued for access to the drugs
through international aid programmes to be rapidly expanded in countries with
the heaviest HIV burdens, and for the focus to be on preventing
spread of the virus rather than simply treating those who already have it.
One study estimated that expansion of treatment could save
7.4 million lives by 2020.
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