IPERGAY PrEP Study Reduces HIV Risk By 86 Percent in MSM

Winnie McCroy READ TIME: 4 MIN.

Last week at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), the French national HIV research agency ANRS announced results of the IPERGAY trial, which examined a novel dosing strategy for pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, among men who have sex with men (MSM). The study evaluated a three-day PrEP regimen of tenofovir plus emtricitabine (brand name Truvada) designed to be taken orally before and after sex. The researchers reported that PrEP reduced HIV risk among the MSM who were prescribed this regimen by an average of 86 percent.

Also at CROI, researchers from the U.K. Medical Research Council presented the results of the PROUD open-label study, which found that daily oral PrEP using Truvada reduced risk among MSM in that study by 86 percent. These findings together provide encouraging additional evidence of the power of PrEP to reduce the risk of HIV infection.

PROUD adds to the substantial evidence regarding the efficacy of daily oral PrEP. The IPERGAY results provide the first evidence that an event-driven regimen was effective among high-risk MSM with frequent sex (median of ten sex acts per month and eight partners every two months). The CDC cautions, however, that researchers do not yet know if this regimen will work among MSM who have sex less frequently or among other populations at high risk for HIV infection. In this study overall, available data suggest that men were taking PrEP an average of three to four days per week.

CDC continues to recommend daily dosing of PrEP and urges people at substantial risk for HIV infection and their health care providers to continue to follow current CDC guidelines.

IPERGAY was a randomized, placebo-controlled study that began in February 2012 and was stopped by an independent data safety review board in October 2014 because of high efficacy. At that point, 400 participants had been enrolled. Instead of a daily pill, as in previous PrEP studies, participants in the IPERGAY study were instructed to take pills three days around the time of sex. This included a dose of two pills between 2-24 hours before having sex (or one pill, if the most recent dose was taken between 1 and 6 days ago); two additional single-pill doses 24 and 48 hours after the last pre-sex dose; and continue one pill daily if additional sex events took place before the above regimen was completed

Therefore, the number of days PrEP was taken each week would vary depending on the frequency of sex, sometimes resulting in near daily use. In any week where sex occurred, there could be as few as four PrEP pills used (with a single act of sex) or as many as eight (with daily sex).

Dr. Jonathan Mermin, MD, MPH, Director of the CDC National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, SD & TB Prevention, said that the CDC welcomed the findings presented by the IPERGAY and PROUD teams, which provide additional evidence of the power of PrEP to reduce the risk of HIV infection.

He said that the IPERGAY trial provided the first evidence that an event-driven regimen was effective among high-risk MSM with frequent sex. But he cautioned that the study only followed men that were taking PrEP an average of three to four days per week. The CDC cautioned that researchers do not yet know if this regimen will work among MSM who have sex less frequently, and would therefore be taking PrEP less often.

"It is not known whether the regimen will work if taken only a few hours or days before sex, without any buildup of the drug from prior use," said Mermin. "Studies suggest that it may take days, depending on the type of sexual exposure, for the active drug in PrEP to build up to an optimal level for preventing HIV infection."

Mermin noted that there was also no data on how effective this regimen would be for heterosexual men and women and injection drug users or on adherence to this relatively complex PrEP regimen outside a trial setting. The CDC continues to recommend only daily use of PrEP, as approved by the FDA. And IPERGAY findings combined with other recent research suggests that even with less than perfect daily adherence, PrEP may still offer substantial protection if taken consistently.

"We applaud ongoing efforts like IPERGAY to identify PrEP dosing strategies that may be more acceptable than oral daily dosing for some individuals at risk, and could potentially lower costs," said Mermin. "In addition, researchers are working to identify alternative delivery vehicles, including injectable PrEP and insertable products such as a vaginal ring. These are exciting avenues for research.

Also during CROI, researchers from the University of Washington presented results from the Partners Demonstration Project being conducted among discordant couples (in which one partner is infected with HIV and the other is not) in Kenya and Uganda. The project is evaluating the impact of providing PrEP as a transitional strategy to protect the HIV-negative partner from infection until their HIV-positive partner can achieve viral suppression through antiretroviral treatment. Preliminary results show that this dual strategy reduced the risk of HIV infection by 96 percent.

These findings suggest that for heterosexual discordant couples, both PrEP and antiretroviral treatment can play an important role in HIV prevention, both separately and in combination. The two strategies provided together have dramatically reduced HIV transmission in this population to date. These results underscore the potential impact of combining the increasing number of powerful HIV prevention options to slow the HIV epidemic.

"We encourage people at substantial risk for HIV infection to take steps to reduce their risk, including speaking with their doctor about PrEP," said Mermin. "Daily, oral PrEP is recommended by CDC as an option for men who have sex with men, heterosexual men and women, and injection drug users."


by Winnie McCroy , EDGE Editor

Winnie McCroy is the Women on the EDGE Editor, HIV/Health Editor, and Assistant Entertainment Editor for EDGE Media Network, handling all women's news, HIV health stories and theater reviews throughout the U.S. She has contributed to other publications, including The Village Voice, Gay City News, Chelsea Now and The Advocate, and lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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