1. Long-Acting Cabotegravir Protects Macaques Against Repeated Penile Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Exposures.
- Author
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Dobard, Charles, Makarova, Natalia, Nishiura, Kenji, Dinh, Chuong, Holder, Angela, Sterling, Mara, Lipscomb, Jonathan, Mitchell, James, Deyounks, Frank, Garber, David, Khalil, George, Spreen, William, Heneine, Walid, and García-Lerma, J Gerardo
- Subjects
MACAQUES ,IMMUNODEFICIENCY ,HETEROSEXUAL men ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,URETHRA ,RNA virus infections ,PYRIDINE ,BIOLOGICAL models ,RESEARCH ,HIV integrase inhibitors ,PENIS ,ANIMAL experimentation ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PREVENTIVE health services ,PRIMATES ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CHEMOPREVENTION ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
We used a novel penile simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) transmission model to investigate whether long-acting cabotegravir (CAB LA) prevents penile SHIV acquisition in macaques. Twenty-two macaques were exposed to SHIV via the foreskin and urethra once weekly for 12 weeks. Of these, 6 received human-equivalent doses of CAB LA, 6 received oral emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, and 10 were untreated. The efficacy of CAB LA was high (94.4%; 95% confidence interval, 58.2%-99.3%) and similar to that seen with oral emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (94.0%; 55.1%-99.2%). The high efficacy of CAB LA in the penile transmission model supports extending the clinical advancement of CAB LA preexposure prophylaxis to heterosexual men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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