Text Version
RSS Feeds
Newsletter
Home Forum Photos Features Newsletter Archive Employment
About US Help Site Map
SEARCH   About US FAQ Site Map Site News
  SERVICES
  -Text Version
  -RSS Feeds
  -Newsletter
  -News Archive
  -Give us feedback
  -Voices of Readers
  -Online community
  -China Biz info
  What's new
 -
 -
Uganda tests pill to prevent HIV infection
+ -
11:47, September 21, 2008

 Related News
 Death toll of Canada listeria outbreak reaches 18
 NZ Food Safety Authority checks milk products in Asian supermarkets
 Britons spend 14 years of life before TV
 WHO says Electronic cigarette not nicotine replacement therapy
 UNICEF: Risk of maternal mortality high in developing countries
 Comment  Tell A Friend
 Print Format  Save Article
A drug designed to reduce the transmission of HIV when taken as a single pill before unprotected sex is going to be tested in Uganda soon, local media said on Saturday.

The pill has proved successful in monkeys and initial tests in human beings have shown encouraging results, the state-owned Saturday Vision quoted Patrick Ndase, who is coordinating the drug trial, as saying.

A team of Ugandan and American scientists are preparing for a Phase III trial, which is considered the final test before the drug goes into use.

The pill would help discordant couples, where one person is HIV positive and the other is negative, to produce children without spreading the infection. It would also help a woman to protect herself in case her sexual partner does not want to use a condom.

Ndase said they are enrolling volunteers from different parts of the country, including the capital of Kampala.

"Overall, we want to enroll 3,900 discordant couples on a volunteer basis and follow them up for a planned period of four years," Ndase said.

Such a strategy, in which someone takes a drug to pre-empt infection is referred to as pre-exposure prophylaxis. It has been used against malaria and TB. If the trial is successful, it would be the first time the method is used to prevent HIV among adults.

The trial, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, is a partnership involving universities, government departments and NGOs in Uganda and the United States.

According to documents from the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition(AVAC), drugs under study are tenofovir disoproxil fumerate (TDF),commercially known as Viread, and TDF combined with emtricitabine (FTC), commercially known as Truvada.

The two drugs are broad antiviral drugs which can be used for all HIV types, according to Ndase.

"As ARVs, they are effective both at early and late stage of the infection and as a prevention tool, they can block initial infection. They have no food or drug restrictions and will soon bevery affordable because their patent period is ending soon," he said.

Although the drugs are proven to be friendly to the kidneys, liver and bones, Ndase said, volunteers will still be closely monitored to ascertain that they do not suffer side effects.

AVAC, a non profit organization carrying out global advocacy to expand HIV prevention, revealed that the trials are currently planned or going on in many countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the US.

"At this point, no one knows whether it will work," a statement said. "But if it does, it will be used in combination with current HIV prevention methods, including safer sex practices, condoms, treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, risk reduction counseling, safe needles, and male circumcision."

Kuhuumuro Apuuli, Director General of the Uganda AIDS Commission, hailed the trials saying all experiments, successful or not, yield important lessons.

"Apart from the new scientific information to base our subsequent research on, there is community participation, political involvement and the whole trial site benefits," he said.

He called for support for the trials and speedy utilization of the findings. "In Uganda, we have always been champions in the HIV fight. The first HIV vaccine trial in Africa was here. We must remain at the forefront."

He, however, warned that the drug should be taken within the context of a comprehensive prevention strategy against HIV.

"At the HIV International Conference in Mexico, it came out clearly that we need to combine all prevention measures, which include behavior change, condoms, treatment, prevention of mother-to-child transmission, male circumcision, vaccines and microbicides."

Elioda Tumwesigye, chairman of the parliamentary committee on HIV/AIDS, welcomed the trial, saying it would offer more protection to women.

"Our serosurvey also showed that HIV incidence is high among married people. This drug would be the best preventive method which a female can control without permission from a man," he said.

Early next year, another trial will start in Kampala and other places in South Africa, using the same drugs in 4,200 sexually active women.

The trial to be conducted by Makerere University and Johns Hopkins University corroboration will be funded by the US National Institute of health.

Source: Xinhua



  Your Message:   Most Commented:
Why some Western media scared of reportage on true China
US-India nuclear agreement going through bottleneck
Why EU leaders call special, emergency summit?
EU wants to be more equal to Washington
Scientists start experiment to recreate Big Bang

|About Peopledaily.com.cn | Advertise on site | Contact us | Site map | Job offer|
Copyright by People's Daily Online, All Rights Reserved

http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90782/6503189.pdf