Anti-HIV Pill Could Be Cost Effective For High Risk Men
Stanford University researchers have concluded that a once a day pill designed to prevent the spread of HIV could prove cost effective for high risk members of the population. The drug, known as tenofovir-emtricitabine, reduces the risk of HIV infection by nearly fifty percent in a 2010 clinical trial, and the test subjects who reported taking the pill religiously, had upwards of seventy percent reduction in HIVB infection. The pill, which is sold under the brand name Truvada, is also used for treating those already infected with HIV, but a landmark study in 2010 proved it effective for preventing the spread of the disease.
Study Results Presented At Microbicides 2012 - No Added HIV Risk With Hormonal Contraceptives
An HIV prevention trial that pre-dates the shift to antiretroviral (ARV)-based approaches is nonetheless helping to answer some of the most relevant and topical questions the field is facing today. More than three years after reporting the primary results of HPTN 035, one of the last trials of the so-called first generation microbicides, researchers from the National Institutes of Health-funded Microbicide Trials Network (MTN) reported two new sets of findings gleaned from the study's trove of statistical data and laboratory specimens.
Truvada As A Preventive Drug For Men At High Risk For HIV May Be Cost-Effective
A once-a-day pill to help prevent HIV infection could significantly reduce the spread of AIDS, but only makes economic sense if used in select, high-risk groups, Stanford University researchers conclude in a new study. The researchers looked at the cost-effectiveness of the combination drug tenofovir-emtricitabine, which was found in a landmark 2010 trial to reduce an individual's risk of HIV infection by 44 percent when taken daily. Patients who were particularly faithful about taking the drug reduced their risk to an even greater extent - by 73 percent.