HIV breakthrough: drug trial shows injection twice a year is 100% effective against infection

Black Owned Newspapers And Blogs

News / Black Owned Newspapers And Blogs 37 Views 0 comments

Getty Images by Linda-Gail Bekker, University of Cape Town A large clinical trial in South Africa and Uganda has shown that a twice-yearly injection of a new pre-exposure prophylaxis drug gives young women total protection from HIV infection. The trial tested whether the six-month injection of lenacapavir would provide better protection against HIV infection than two other drugs, both daily pills. All three medications are pre-exposure prophylaxis (or PrEP) drugs. Physician-scientist Linda-Gail Bekker, principal investigator for the South African part of the study, tells Nadine Dreyer what makes this breakthrough so significant and what to expect next. Tell us about the trial and what it set out to achieve The Purpose 1 trial with 5,000 participants took place at three sites in Uganda and 25 sites in South Africa to test the efficacy of lenacapavir and two other drugs. Lenacapavir (Len LA) is a fusion capside inhibitor. It interferes with the HIV capsid, a protein shell that protects HIV’s genetic material and enzymes needed for replication. It is administered just under the skin, once every six months. The randomized controlled trial, sponsored by the drug developers Gilead Sciences, tested several things. The first was whether a six-monthly injection of lenacapavir...

0 Comments