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Large Africa study makes important breakthrough in HIV prevention

Large Africa study makes important breakthrough in HIV prevention

Long-acting cabotegravir injections once every eight weeks was better than the daily tablet used for HIV prevention.
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Sinead Delany-Moretlwe, University of the Witwatersrand

Women make up more than half of the people living with HIV around the world. Young women between the ages of 10 and 24 are twice as likely to get HIV as young men in the same age group. In East and Southern Africa young women will acquire HIV on average five to seven years earlier than their male peers.

Researchers have been working hard to find effective HIV prevention measures.

Most notable is the pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) pill known as Truvada. This is a combination of two antiretroviral drugs – tenofovir and emtricitabine. This can be effective in preventing HIV acquisition. But taking a pill every day is not practical for many people.

Scientists from the HIV Prevention Trials Network recently found that a PrEP regimen of long-acting cabotegravir (CAB LA) injections once every eight weeks was better than the daily tablet used for HIV prevention. Ina Skosana spoke to Sinead Delany-Moretlwe, a research professor at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa and director of research at the Wits Reproductive Health & HIV Institute to find out more.


Can you tell us about the study?

This study, known as HPTN 084 is the first one to compare the efficacy of two HIV prevention or pre-exposure prophylaxis regimens.

The first regimen consisted of an injection of the long-acting antiretroviral drug, cabotegravir given every eight weeks. The second regimen was the daily oral dose of Truvada. Truvada has been shown to be highly effective for HIV prevention when taken as prescribed in a variety of populations and contexts.

We enrolled over 3,200 sexually active, HIV-uninfected cisgender women at 20 sites in seven countries. Research took place in Botswana, Eswatini, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa, Uganda, and Zimbabwe between November 2017 and November 2020.

Our study randomised participants to one of two arms. One arm received active cabotegravir and a Truvada placebo. The other arm received active Truvada and placebos for cabotegravir. Cabotegravir was administered daily by mouth for 5 weeks and via intramuscular injection at 8-weekly intervals after an initial 4-week interval load.

What did you find?

Preliminary findings show that overall 1% of participants were infected with HIV during the study period. This suggests that both cabotegravir and Truvada are highly effective for HIV prevention in this population.

The 34 incident infections detected in participants assigned to Truvada is equivalent to an incident of 1.79%. And the four infections detected in the participants assigned to cabotegravir is equivalent to an incidence of 0.21%. This confirms a new prevention option for women that offers a significant advantage over existing oral PrEP which requires consistent daily use and is associated with significant adherence challenges.

We observed roughly 9 times the number of incident HIV infections in the Truvada arm compared to the cabotegravir arm. This finding suggests that cabotegravir is much more effective than Truvada in preventing HIV infection in women. And the threshold for early stopping of the trial was met. Based on these findings the independent data and safety monitoring board recommended that the blinded portion of the study be stopped early and the results released to the scientific and broader community.

An earlier sibling study in cisgender men and transgender women called HPTN 083 showed similar results. A prep regimen containing long-acting cabotegravir injectable once every 8 weeks was superior to the daily oral Truvada in that population.

What are the next steps?

The study results are important and timely as more methods to prevent HIV among women at higher risk of HIV are urgently needed. These include methods that do not depend on daily or near-daily pill-taking, condom use or abstention from sex. The development of alternative methods to prevent HIV, and more adherence-friendly schedules than are currently available, will increase the HIV prevention choices and acceptability for women and reduce new HIV infections.

We have communicated with the research ethics committees and national drug regulators overseeing this study, and site investigators and study participants are being notified about the results as soon as possible. Participants will be able to learn about the medication that they were receiving. A protocol amendment will be submitted for regulatory review to allow participants to continue taking their assigned medication or to switch to cabotegravir if they choose.

Participants on Truvada will be offered cabotegravir as soon as the medication can be made available. All participants will be asked to continue on the study. And if they chose not to remain on the study, they will be referred for the best locally available HIV prevention services. We look forward to presenting these results in a peer-review setting at upcoming conferences as we finalise the primary analysis.The Conversation

Sinead Delany-Moretlwe, Associate Professor and Director: Research at the Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute I, University of the Witwatersrand

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

An open letter to Cyprian Nyakundi

open-letter1

I have never met you in person but I know you are one bitter individual who seems to have many unresolved issues. You are always at war with one brand or another.

I will not mention the brands you have collided with in the past for the obvious reason that they are in the public domain. The recent one you had is something that concerns me though. I will try and give you some advise regarding this. As the bible says,

“Iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another”, Proverbs 27: 17

  1. Do yourself a favor and research properly before writing blog posts. You give bloggers a bad name. There is a lot of brilliant Kenyan Content online produced by bloggers, some of whom are products of Daystar University.
  2. Not all journalists are products of Daystar University. One journalist you cited in your article was not a student of Daystar University. This is not an endorsement to your claims that her journalistic work was sub-standard. Try getting yourself a job in one media house first so that you may compare your skills.
  3. Daystar University’s fees are high without a doubt. Did you also know that some students go through the university totally through scholarships? Yours truly is a product of Daystar’s Work-Study scholarship.
  4. Every learning institution has a few bad products. Hell! Even every home produces a few misfits. Should we generalize and say that those homes are not supposed to be part of the society? Probably the person to do some soul searching is yourself.
  5. Being a keyboard warrior is the in thing according to you. Please do not drag people into your petty brawls with certain individuals. Solve them like a real man. Real men face each other and solve issues.
  6. You need to see a counselor, probably book an appointment with the PHD students at Daystar University’s Nuru Counselling center to help you process some of the conflicts you have within. They can help you explore these issues. They have some cool personality tests by the way. You should try them out.

That being said, what’s the real issue behind your hashtag #BoycottDaystarUni? Weren’t you expelled from some other private university?

I hear they denied you an application letter. That’s because every student who gets enrolled in Daystar University has to have integrity. That’s why we all filled the personal statement when we were applying to join the university.

Views expressed in this post are my own.

Shea by Asal products for your skin and hair

Shea by Asal Soaps

I am one person who is not  so big on facial products. I would classify myself as a late adopter in the consumer  graph. Which is why when I found this gem, I had to share.

Shea By Asal is a line of products by Asal Investments. I bumped into them at the Prestige Plaza parking lot. They sell products made  of shea butter from Sudan. From hair pomades, hair oils to different soaps written about by Kurly Kichana on this post.

The first time I bought Turmeric soap. I was just attracted by the shape of the soap. I also asked a little about the importance of turmeric to the skin. I must say that I saw its benefits as it made my face smooth.

The next time I went there, I bought small soaps of different flavors. There was the coffee soap that functioned like an exfoliating  scrub. The collection also had a shampoo bar that I have used for washing my hair regularly.

These soaps were miniature molded and cost only a hundred shillings per piece. That’s a good deal for someone who wants to try out a product. Speaking of miniature, I have not yet exhausted a month later.

Perhaps you should try their products, especially for those of us with natural hair.

You can visit their Facebook page to view more of their products.

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Hello dear readers. We promised you growth this year. Yeah! We have taken a step towards that and have moved from mwandada.wordpress.com

We hope to keep you entertained, informed and educated on issues pertaining to girl child, women and the family in general.

We would also like to hear from you. What would you like to read here? Send your comments to mwanadadablog@gmail.com

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2015 in review

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2015 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

A San Francisco cable car holds 60 people. This blog was viewed about 280 times in 2015. If it were a cable car, it would take about 5 trips to carry that many people.

Click here to see the complete report.