May 11, 2012
A U.S. government panel has
recommended the use of a once daily pill to help prevent HIV infection. The
pill has been shown to be very effective in studies. The Food and Drug
Administration, the FDA, now has until June 15th to
decide whether to approve the panel’s recommendation.
The Food and Drug Administration’s
Antiviral Drugs Advisory Committee has endorsed the use of Truvada as a
prevention method.
Mitchell Warren, head of the AIDS
advocacy group AVAC, says it’s a combination pill.
“It’s
made up of two different antiretrovirals – tenofovir and emtricitabine. And
those two drugs had already been approved by the FDA a number of years ago
individually; and then about 8 years ago they were approved as the combination
drug. But all of those approvals related to the use of the drug for treating
people who are already infected with HIV,” he said.
But since it now would be used as a
prevention method it needs new FDA approval.
Warren said, “It’s the first time
that the FDA is considering a pill for prevention of HIV. The data presented
came from a number of trials looking at the potential benefit of providing this
drug to HIV uninfected people, who are at high risk of HIV in hopes of
preventing transmission.”
The evidence is based on trials
where participants included men who have sex with men and discordant couples.
That’s where one partner is infected and the other is not. The prevention
method is called preexposure prophylaxis.
“If
you are at risk of HIV, if you perceive yourself to be at risk, if you’re able
to take this pill everyday as part of a combination of activities, including
getting frequent HIV testing, you can reduce your risk of infection quite
substantially. And that’s a huge step forward in adding a new option for men
and women to prevent HIV,” he said.
The FDA often follows the
recommendations of its advisory committees, but approval is not guaranteed. The
agency must consider a number of things before deciding. One is what would the
drug label say? Would it list only specific high risk groups like men who have
sex with men or recommend it for both men and women?
It also must require the
manufacturer – Gilead – to produce a risk evaluation and mitigation strategy.
This would help ensure safe and effective use of Truvada, including extensive
training for health providers and testing to ensure people are indeed HIV
negative before taking the pill.
Warren says another big issue
affecting Truvada is cost.
“One
often hears in the United States where this is described as a $14,000 a year pill. Rarely does anyone pay
that. And one of the really exciting things – when Gilead presented all of the
data they actually said publically that they plan to create a patients
assistance program. So if you are HIV infected and don’t have insurance, there
are programs that Gilead supports to make the drug available at very low cost
or in some cases even free,” he said.
The drug would be much cheaper in
developing countries, possibly several hundred dollars a year. But that’s still
high by developing country standards. Warren says that price could be
negotiated and reduced if PEPFAR, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief, and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, plan to
use Truvada.
Questions
1. Is AIDS common or rare in your
country?
2. Why is it that the HI virus is
rapidly spreading?
3. What can you say about this
another prevention method for HIV?
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