Subscribe To Thriver News

Get our weekly updates

Gus Cairns

Published: 11 August 2015

The first data from a Brazilian open-label demonstration project of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) show, in common with several other studies presented at the Eighth IAS Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2015) in Vancouver, Canada, last month, that the higher a person’s risk of HIV, the more likely they are to seek and use PrEP.

People at higher risk were more likely to be interested in and enrol in the PrEP Brasil study, and people who self-referred to the study were more likely to join it than ones referred by doctors.

For the first time in a PrEP study, PrEP Brasil was able to demonstrate high uptake and interest among a relatively small but significant group of transgender women.

These initial data were presented by Beatriz Grinsztejn of Brazil’s Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (FIOCRUZ), Brazil’s public health research institute in Rio de Janeiro, which among many other functions, runs an HIV clinic.

The demonstration project enrolled men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women between April 2014 and April 2015 at FIOCRUZ and at two sites in São Paulo at the city’s University clinic (USP) and its Referral Centre for HIV Treatment, CRT.

Dr Grinszstejn told the conference that HIV prevalence among men who have sex with men and transgender women in Brazil was very high in some locations. In the capital city, Brasilia, nearly one in four MSM has HIV; in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo HIV prevalence in MSM is 18% and 15% respectively. Other regional cities such as Salvador (at 6.5%) and Recife (at 4%) have lower prevalence, but even Manaus in the heart of Amazonia has 8% prevalence.

The study was open to MSM and transgender women aged 18 or over who, in the previous year, had had two or more condomless anal sex partners, or two or more HIV-positive anal sex partners (regardless of condom use), or a diagnosis of a bacterial sexually transmitted infection (STI).

At the USP site, the study was advertised but clinic attendees were responsible for self-referral; at the other two sites, referral could be by attendees or by their physician. Nine hundred and eighty-six people were approached or referred themselves. Of them 82 (8%) turned out to have HIV while 106 did not fit the risk criteria. The remaining 798 were invited to an initial screening visit and of them, 490 (61%) attended. At this point, three more tested HIV-positive and some others were disqualified from the study for clinical reasons such as chronic kidney disease; 427 attended their first enrollment visit.

Four hundred and nine people eventually started PrEP, just over the 400 initially planned for. This represents a 51.25% uptake of PrEP in all those who were potentially eligible. Six per cent (24 individuals) were transgender women: although this is still a relatively small number, it represents the largest proportion of trans* people so far recruited in a PrEP study and it is encouraging that 67% of potentially eligible transgender women started PrEP.

READ THE REST OF THE ARTICLE HERE AT AIDSMAP

 

You can download the slides of this presentation from the conference website.

 


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.