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Tenofovir-based oral preexposure prophylaxis prevents HIV infection among women.


ABSTRACT: Despite tremendous promise as a female-controlled HIV prevention strategy, implementation of preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among women has been limited, in part because of disparate efficacy results from randomized trials in this population. This review synthesizes existing evidence regarding PrEP efficacy for preventing HIV infection in women and considerations for delivering PrEP to women.In three efficacy trials, conducted among men and women, tenofovir-based oral PrEP reduced HIV acquisition in subgroups of women by 49-79% in intent-to-treat analyses, and by >85% when accounting for PrEP adherence. Two trials did not demonstrate an HIV prevention benefit from PrEP in women, but substantial evidence indicates those results were compromised by very low adherence to the study medication. Qualitative research has identified risk perception, stigma, and aspects of clinical trial participation as influencing adherence to study medication. Pharmacokinetic studies provide supporting evidence that PrEP offers HIV protection in women who are adherent to the medication.Tenofovir-based daily oral PrEP prevents HIV acquisition in women. Offering PrEP as an HIV prevention option for women at high risk of HIV acquisition is a public health imperative and opportunities to evaluate implementation strategies for PrEP for women are needed.

SUBMITTER: Thomson KA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4705855 | biostudies-other | 2016 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Tenofovir-based oral preexposure prophylaxis prevents HIV infection among women.

Thomson Kerry A KA   Baeten Jared M JM   Mugo Nelly R NR   Bekker Linda-Gail LG   Celum Connie L CL   Heffron Renee R  

Current opinion in HIV and AIDS 20160101 1


<h4>Purpose of review</h4>Despite tremendous promise as a female-controlled HIV prevention strategy, implementation of preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among women has been limited, in part because of disparate efficacy results from randomized trials in this population. This review synthesizes existing evidence regarding PrEP efficacy for preventing HIV infection in women and considerations for delivering PrEP to women.<h4>Recent findings</h4>In three efficacy trials, conducted among men and women  ...[more]

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