CROI 2015: Daily PrEP Leads to Better Adherence and Protective Drug Levels in Women

alt

HIV-negative African women assigned to take once-daily Truvada for HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) achieved better adherence than those assigned to take PrEP twice-weekly or before and after sex, according to findings from the HPTN 067 trial presented at the recent 2015 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Seattle.

Truvada (tenofovir/emtricitabine) PrEP has been shown to dramatically reduce the risk of HIV infection in clinical trials enrolling gay and bisexual men (iPrEx and its Open Label Extension, PROUD and Ipergay) and heterosexual couples (Partners PrEP and TDF2), but results have been less impressive in studies of women, with the Fem-PrEP and VOICE trials both being unable to show a protective effect.

Linda-Gail Bekker from theInstitute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine in Cape Town, Robert Grant from the University of California San Francisco, and fellow investigators conducted the HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) 067 or ADAPT study to investigate whether once-daily and less frequent Truvada regimens provide equivalent coverage of sex acts, as well as how they compare in terms of pill burden and side effects.

Findings from the Ipergay trial, also reported at CROI, showed that Truvada taken before and after sex reduced the risk of HIV infection by 86% -- the same as in the PROUD trial of once-daily PrEP -- but the men in Ipergay had sex often enough that they took Truvada 14 days per month on average, equivalent to the 4 days per week shown to be highly protective in iPrEx. Thus, it remains unclear whether less frequent PrEP use around the time of sex would be equally effective. In addition, pharmacokinetic studies indicate that PrEP drugs reach higher levels and persist longer in male rectal tissue than in female genital tissue.

The full HPTN 067 trial included women in Cape Town, South Africa, and men who have sex with men and transgender women in Bangkok and New York City. The analysis presented at CROI focused on the 191 women enrolled at the Emavundleni Research Center in Cape Town. Their median age was 26 years and more than 80% were unmarried and unemployed.

After 6 weeks of weekly Truvada with directly observed dosing to estimate steady-state drug levels, 179 women were randomly assigned to self-administer Truvada either once-daily, twice-weekly with an extra booster dose after sex, or before and after sex (event-driven), all for 24 weeks. Pills were dispensed using an electronic device that recorded each time it was opened. The women were interviewed weekly to review pill use and sexual activity, and tenofovir and emtricitabine levels in plasma and peripheral blood mononuclear cells were measured at weeks 10 and 30.

Results

"The majority of women took oral PrEP when made available in an open-label study," the researchers concluded. "Daily dosing resulted in better coverage of sex acts and adherence, and higher drug levels."

"Daily dosing may foster better habit formation and provide the most forgiveness for missed doses at observed adherence levels," they added. "These findings support current recommendations for daily use of oral [tenofovir/emtricitabine] PrEP in women."

"The regimens used in this trial and the definition of PrEP coverage was based on information that was available when the trial was designed in 2010," according to a fact sheet about the study findings issued by the HIV Prevention Trials Network. "More current information suggests that higher concentrations of PrEP medications are required for protection from vaginal exposure to HIV, as would be afforded by daily oral dosing or any topical dosing."

4/17/15

Reference

LG Bekker, J Hughes, R Amico, R Grant, et al. HPTN 067/ADAPT Cape Town: A Comparison of Daily and Nondaily PrEP Dosing in African Women. 2015 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections. Seattle, February 23-24, 2015. Abstract 978LB.

Other Source

HIV Prevention Trials Network. HPTN 067/ADAPT Study Results Brief on Daily vs. Non-daily PrEP Dosing Regimens for South African Women. Fact sheet. February 2015.