Sunday, May 30, 2010

World No Tobacco Day - a critical point in the Year of the Lung

31 May is World No Tobacco Day
The World No Tobacco Day, 31 May 2010, is a critical point in the 2010: Year of the Lung campaign, according to the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union). Studies show that 50% of all deaths from lung disease are linked to tobacco use. "Strengthening tobacco control is the single most important action we can take to improve global lung health," said Dr Nils E Billo, Executive Director of The Union and chair of the Forum of International Respiratory Societies (FIRS), which is sponsoring the Year of the Lung. "Tobacco is a leading cause of preventable death and kills 5 million men, women and children each year." Read more


According to the World Health Organization (WHO), if tobacco control is not improved, the death rate will increase from 5 million to 8 million by 2030, and 520 million people will die from tobacco use in the next 50 years.

The Union has been active in tobacco control for 25 years, providing technical assistance, education and research to countries seeking to pass and implement smokefree legislation, develop smokefree policies, train health care professionals in smoking cessation techniques and build public awareness of the health consequences of tobacco use. Since 2007, The Union has also been a partner in the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use, a US$ 375 million initiative funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies.

- Through its regional offices in Europe, Latin America, South‐East Asia, the Middle East, and the Asia Pacific, The Union is working with governments in 14 of the world’s top tobacco‐using countries to develop stronger tobacco control laws.

- As co‐manager of the Bloomberg Initiative grants programme (with the US‐based Campaign for Tobacco‐Free Kids), The Union has given grants to 73 tobacco control organisations and governments in 27 countries to develop tobacco control interventions since 2007.

- A series of technical and management courses designed specifically to build the capacity of tobacco control organisations has been offered in 14 countries since 2007.

- A wide range of resources for tobacco control advocates is now available for free through The Union's website www.tobaccofreeunion.org. These include technical guides for establishing smokefree health care facilities, schools and sporting events; case studies of smokefree cities; economic reports; fact sheets and other information.

The WHO theme for this year's World No Tobacco Day is "Gender and Tobacco: with an emphasis on marketing to women".

Published in:
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
The Colombo Times, Colombo, Sri lanka
Elites TV News, USA
Banderas News, Mexico
American Chronicle, USA
Media for freedom, Nepal
Bihar and Jharkhand News Service (BJNS)
Northern Voice Online
Theunion.org
Newsblaze.com
Celebrifi.com
MSG.com
Nowpublic.com
Twilightwhisper.com

Friday, May 28, 2010

Lubricants' use may put individuals at higher risk of HIV

To listen to the audio podcast of this interaction, click here
"Use of lubricants may put individuals at higher risk" said Professor (Dr) Ian McGowan, co-chair of the International Microbicides Conference (M2010) in Pittsburgh, USA at a press conference. "One of the M2010 themes is the growing realization that there is a significant issue of HIV acquisition through rectal sex not only for men who have sex with men (MSM) who are clearly very visible HIV high risk group but increasingly for women who may be exposed to the virus rectally which is relatively new observation although may be going on for quite some time" added Prof Ian McGowan. Read more


"What we have seen at this conference is that there are MSM in sub-saharan Africa and HIV rates are alarmingly high in this population" said Prof Ian McGowan.

As per published data, there is a number of women who were reported to have anal sex.

"We were testing some over-the-counter (OTC) lubricants that HIV prevention advocates have identified or some which are commonly used by those who engage in rectal sex. These were some of the basic formulations of lubricants that one can buy OTC or through internet.
And what we were seeing is that those lubricants that had higher concentration of salts were actually damaging the epithelial of the rectal tissue" said Dr Charlene S Dezzutti, Associate Professor, University of Pittsburgh. Damage to rectal epithelial is supposed to up the risk of contracting HIV.

"Silicon based lubricants and the lubricants that didn't had too many salts in it didn't show any damage to the rectal epithelial" said Dr Charlene Dezzutti.

Noted HIV prevention activist and journalist Anna Forbes commented "Lubricants are not evaluated by the Federation Drug Authority (FDA) in the same way as the drugs are, nevertheless some human data is showing there is some real potential health risk."

"None of our models are validated so we don't know how predictive they are of health outcomes and these indications are based on some of the very first studies that need further evaluation" said Dr Charlene Dezzutti.

"We did a study in Baltimore and Los Angeles (LA) in 2006 and 2009, and men and women who reported that they had receptive anal intercourse, and half the survey sample was HIV positive and half wasn't, we found that more people who used rectal lubricants had sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)" said Dr Pamina Gorbach, Associate Professor, University of California Los Angeles (UCLA).

"There are so many types of lubes in the market and changes every day! And most men remember only the brand name, it is difficult for study participants to remember what they used especially if you go overtime. Also at times, people used different types of lubes - mixed different kinds of lubes" said Dr Pamina Gorbach.

"20% of men who used lubes used more than one type of lube" further added Dr Pamina Gorbach.

Boston study on MSM was conducted in the largest health centre for sexual minorities which takes care of about 15,000 people and out of these, 9000 are MSM, 1300 are HIV positive. "Rationale of the study was that we are in a situation in US where MSM are the largest group of people who get new HIV infections in the country and there have been guidelines for example on use of antiretroviral drugs, use of post-exposure prophylaxis for more than 15 years, but our experience tells us that they are not really utilized" said Professor (Dr) Kenneth Mayer from Brown University.

"We recruited a group of men who had a substantial risk of becoming HIV infected and of what they knew and what their attitudes were towards these different prevention modalities. So the study sample consisted of 105 men who were initially recruited for looking at the acceptability of rectal products like lubricants and other approaches to rectal prevention of HIV. Mean age was 41 years of age and majority had completed high school. Three quarters were Caucasians, and 15-20% were African American" said Prof Kenneth Mayer.

"Men to be in the study were supposed to have at least 1 episode of anal sex in two weeks in the preceding year, so about 25 anal sex episodes to get in the study. Prior to coming to the study men have had 9 episodes of anal sex with a mean number of 4 partners and over half of these episodes were unprotected. What we found out on post-exposure prophylaxis where there are guidelines already, that about 7% of men had used post-exposure prophylaxis, less than half of men had ever heard of post exposure prophylaxis. When we explained the benefits of post exposure prophylaxis, close to 60% of men said they would consider using post-exposure prophylaxis. 40% of men said they would consider using pre-exposure prophylaxis. When we asked them about rectal microbicides, nearly half of the men said they would consider using rectal microbicides. There is substantial lack of information on existing prevention modalities in the communities like post-exposure prophylaxis" said Prof Kenneth Mayer.

On a question from a journalist attending the press conference, "how much of anal sex is among MSM and how much is among heterosexual people", the panellists responded "there are many more women who have had heterosexual anal intercourse ever or in the last year clearly - than MSM. MSM probably represent a relatively small number of population in the world, so in terms of numbers of individuals they are less, however there may be more incidence of anal sex per se."

"Over a third of women in US had anal intercourse - no data exists on how often they had it" added Dr Pamina.

"Some of the lubricants aren't condom friendly, silicon based lubricants are condom friendly and don't harm or break the condom" added the panellists.

Users of lubricants have been advised to double check on the package for content that make up the product they buy as this could expose them to risks of infection with sexually transmitted diseases and HIV. A laboratory study that compared over-the-counter and mail-order lubricants commonly used with receptive anal intercourse found many of the products contain higher amounts of dissolved salts and sugars compared to what's normally found in a cell. As a result, the products had toxic effects on the cells and rectal tissue studied. None of the lubricants had measurable anti-HIV activity.

We Need A Lifetime Of No Tobacco, And Not Merely A Day

The World No Tobacco day is once again upon us to remind us politely that health is a concern of everyone. From personal physical fitness to the threats posed by growing global pandemics, all people share an interest in improving the well-being of themselves and others. Real, sincere and ongoing action is needed to achieve this, instead of mere rhetoric. The war against tobacco needs to be won, and not just fought, with renewed pledges; stricter legislation; innovative awareness programmes; and the will to succeed in curbing the menace of tobacco. Read more



It is easy to reel off statistics about the health hazards of tobacco consumption -- tobacco consumption is a leading cause of death among Indians aged 30-69 and 1 million Indians die from smoking-related diseases each year in India ; among all women, 11% (over 54 million women) use some form of tobacco ; approximately 1 in 20 (or 90,000) deaths among women 35-69 years old can be attributed to smoking ; tobacco use causes lung and other cancers, respiratory/heart disease, heart attacks, and other diseases.; smokeless tobacco causes oral cancer, pancreatic cancer, increased blood pressure /heart rate and adverse reproductive outcomes ; consumption of smokeless tobacco during pregnancy decreases gestational age at birth and decreases birth weight. ..... The list can go on and on.

But does it really cut any ice with the users? Perhaps, since the times of Adam and Eve, the forbidden fruit seems to be the sweetest. So it is with tobacco and its many variants. Very often my smoker friends argue that the state has no right to take away their freedom of smoking or eating tobacco. They should be free to eat, drink, smoke, whatever they like. Even if one concedes their argument about freedom to make personal choices, they need to be reminded that one’s freedom is only acceptable as long as it does not curb the freedom of others. So the government has every right to curb their freedom of smoking in public places to prevent innocent non smokers from becoming victims. Even within homes, children and family members are, very often, subject to passive smoking of their elders, spouses and/or other smoker relatives. So, all those who value their freedom to smoke, will have to respect the freedom of others too. Beyond this, we can let it be the smokers’ choice to lead a healthy life or inch towards disaster in isolation. We can only counsel such diehards, who are bent upon committing death by tobacco.

Again, the duty of the state is not merely to enact sensible laws for tobacco control, but also enforce them strictly—something which is shamefully lacking in our country. We have wonderful laws, but just on paper. To find the ground reality, some students of Class XII of Loreto Convent College, recently did a random survey of the city of Lucknow, as part of their Environmental Education Project. They surveyed 200 persons (150 males and 50 females) of various age groups, and coming from different strata of society- -from rickshaw pullers to executives.

They traversed the entire city clicking photographs of shops/kiosks selling cigarettes and other tobacco products much within 100metres range of educational institutions. They searched in vain, for signage in schools/colleges proclaiming that smoking is prohibited in the premises. They examined the tobacco/gutkha pouches for the information printed on them, and even posed as customers and easily bought cigarette and tobacco packs, despite being less than 18 years of age.

I am tempted here to mention some of their findings, which point directly to the shabby manner in which the laws are enforced:

Although a large majority of the respondents (98.5%) had heard anti tobacco messages on television/radio, yet more than 70% of the males and 50% females surveyed were found to be users of tobacco products.

41% of the respondents confessed to have smoked in public places, but surprisingly 94% of the offenders were neither checked nor fined for this violation. More that 29% respondents said that there was no ban on smoking at their workplace.

Out of all the minors surveyed (males and females), 81% of the males and 33% of the females were tobacco users. 76% of the people felt that it was very easy for minors to buy tobacco. In fact, more than 51% of the respondents had bought tobacco products from minors, at some time or the other.
78% of the people said that they had seen tobacco shops within 100 yards radius of schools and colleges. Out of the 36 city schools/colleges which the students personally visited, 30 had one or more shops selling cigarettes and tobacco products, in some cases right next to their entry gates.

Out of the 20 gutkha packets of different brands studied by the students, 7 were known to be regularly advertised on television, radio, cinema halls. Only 12 gutkha brands had mentioned some alluring descriptors. The nicotine and tar content was not mentioned on any cigarette/tobacco pack.

If this is the situation in the capital city of the state of Uttar Pradesh, one can imagine the scene in other towns, as far as implementation of laws is concerned.

It is very well to talk about the impact of the tobacco industry’s targeting of adolescents and women with aggressive advertising and marketing gimmicks. But are we doing anything worthwhile to counteract their effect? What is the use of enacting a law banning the sale of tobacco products to minors when it is just too easy for anyone (irrespective of age) to procure them? This should be made a criminal offence with the license of the violator confiscated forever.

The peddlers of poison always find out new ways and means to lure the victims. Recently hookah bars and lounges have become the craze in metropolitan cities. These are frequented by a large number of under age students—mostly coming from elite families. The bar owners have deviously spread the misconception that unlike cigarettes, hookah is not harmful and does not contain nicotine. It is trendy and cool. But scientific research has proved that people who regularly smoke ‘hookah’ or‘shisha’ can suffer from dangerous levels of carbon monoxide (CO) similar to that of inhaling a car exhaust. A typical hour-long ‘shisha’ session involves inhaling 100 to 200 times the volume of smoke inhaled when smoking a cigarette. Doctors have pointed out that Hookah smoking increases respiratory problems.

Recognizing the importance of reducing tobacco use among women, The World Health Organization (WHO) has selected "Gender and tobacco with an emphasis on marketing to women" as the theme for the World No Tobacco Day 2010. Women are a major target of opportunity for the tobacco industry. The tobacco companies have launched marketing campaigns that represent cigarette smoking as feminine and fashionable to counter the public consensus that smoking is socially unacceptable and unhealthy.

But what is more alarming is the increasing popularity of smokeless tobacco, (which is falsely considered a safe alternative to smoking cigarettes) amongst men, women and adolescents alike. In India, it is socially more acceptable, particularly in the case of women, to chew various forms of tobacco, as compared to smoking cigarettes. Smokeless tobacco comes in various forms like gutka, khaini, zarda, mishri, mawa, pan masala and is sold cheaply in small sachets. Apart from the plastic packets causing environmental pollution, all these products contain poisonous and toxic cancer causing substances and are known to cause oral cancer, pancreatic cancer, increased blood pressure and heart rate, and adverse reproductive outcomes.

According to Dr PC Gupta, the first Indian to win the prestigious Luther Terry Award for tobacco control, the sale of perfumed and flavoured gutka should be banned throughout India. The state of Goa has taken a lead in this direction and needs to be emulated by others. Even the widely used non tobacco product, areca or betel nut is a cancer causing substance. Dr P Chaturvedi of Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai talks of the ‘Gutka /Areca Nut Chewer’s syndrome’ which is highly prevalent in the Indian subcontinent, and which results in a plethora of disabilities, the foremost being oral cancer.

Are we ready to impose stringent bans on the sale of these poisonous products? Or are we happy to merely exhort the public to refrain from buying them and at the same time legitimatize their sale? I agree that it may not be easy to banish them completely from the market. But the least that can be done at government level is to make it mandatory to print their tar and nicotine content on the packs instead of the attractive descriptors like saffron blend/sugandhit/premium pan masala/gutka; and mild/light/ menthol cigarettes. At the same time, increasing their price will at least make them out of reach of a vast majority.

Enforcement of tobacco control laws is as (rather more) important as enacting them, especially when kids and teenagers are at the receiving end of misleading but attractive advertisements of various forms of tobacco. They are not only being manipulated by the tobacco industry to be bonded for life to tobacco, they also grow up having scant regard for the law which can be easily circumvented.

It is important to disseminate, in the public, scientifically proven health hazards of tobacco with a view to remove many popular misconceptions and myths which are regularly floated by vested interests in the garb of chic products like the more feminine slim/slender/light/menthol cigarettes; water filtered flavoured tobacco of the hookah, and the sweet scented gutka/pan masala.


We must not forget that all tobacco products are equally lethal, irrespective of their misleading names, attractive packaging and glamorous advertisements.


Shobha Shukla
(The author is the Honorary Editor of Citizen News Service (CNS), has worked earlier with State Planning Institute, UP, and teaches Physics at India's prestigious Loreto Convent. Email: shobha@citizen-news.org, website: www.citizen-news.org)

Published in:
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Elites TV News, USA
News Trust News, New Delhi, Delhi
Thai-Indian News, Bangkok, Thailand
Bihar and Jharkhand NEws Service (BJNS)
Little about
Hookahforum.com
Smokeless Cigarette Reviews
Connect.in.com
Allvoices.com
Twitter.com
Wikio.com
Reddit.com
Friendfeed.com

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Say Yes To Life: Say No To Tobacco


World No Tobacco Day is on 31 May 2010
The theme of this year's World No Tobacco Day (WNTD) is "Gender and tobacco with an emphasis on marketing to women." It is designed to draw particular attention to the harmful effects of tobacco marketing towards women and girls. Controlling the epidemic of tobacco among women is an important part of any comprehensive tobacco control strategy. Professor Judith Longstaff Mackay, Senior Adviser, World Lung Foundation, spoke to CNS in Hong Kong. She lamented that for decades women and adolescents have been a major target of opportunity for the tobacco industry, and more so now, when this industry needs to recruit new users to replace the nearly half of current users who will die prematurely from tobacco-related diseases. So it is an ongoing battle – longer than the 100 years war. Prof Judith Mackay has been conferred the prestigious BMJ Lifetime Achievement award for her contribution to the fight against tobacco across the world, and is also a recipient of the American Cancer Society's Luther Terry award for Outstanding Individual Leadership. As a leader in the battle to control tobacco, she was once described by the tobacco industry as "one of the three most dangerous people in the world" (Time magazine). Read more



Women comprise about 20% of the world's more than 1 billion smokers. Especially troubling is the rising prevalence of tobacco use among girls. The new WHO report, ‘Women and health: today's evidence, tomorrow's agenda’, points to evidence that tobacco advertising increasingly targets girls. In fact, women, minorities, blue-collar workers, adolescents, and even children are bombarded by clever and often insidious marketing and advertising gimmicks of the tobacco industry. There is a strong correlation between smoking rates among adolescents and sales promotion expenditures by tobacco companies.

Recently, I had the opportunity to talk to Professor Judith Longstaff Mackay in Hong Kong. According to Judith, this year’s theme of World No Tobacco Day is very relevant, as women need to be an integral part of all health schemes.

She said that the number of women smokers in the Western Pacific Region is relatively low at 5%, as compared to 60% of men smokers. Twenty five years ago it was predicted that smoking in Asian women would inevitably increase, thanks to the women centric aggressive advertising/marketing tactics of the tobacco industry, increase in the purchasing power of women as a result of economic independence, and the diminishing role of parents/teachers/elders in determining their behavioural patterns. But interestingly, this has not happened. Yet we have to be cautiously optimistic about this current low level of smoking in women of this region, and remain ‘terribly vigilant’.

Some of the recent surveys point at a worrying indication that young girls are likely to take to smoking. In fact, according to a new WHO report, data from 151 countries show that about 7% of adolescent girls smoke cigarettes as opposed to 12% of adolescent boys. The report also points to evidence that tobacco advertising is increasingly targeting young girls with their slim, light, nicotine free menthol-cigarette overtures . While in Hong Kong, I saw for the first time, a quick puff of the long and slim cigarettes being enjoyed by young girls on roadsides. This was a common sight, although Hong Kong reportedly has less than 4% of women smokers. It has very strict laws against smoking in public places. It also banned all imports/ manufacture/selling of chewing tobacco way back in 1987. In India, perhaps due to societal pressures, it is still uncommon to find female smokers out in the open, although a lot many smoke in hiding, away from the public gaze. A worse form of tobacco abuse gaining wide spread popularity in India is flavoured chewing tobacco, called gutka/mawa/pan masala, which, though portrayed as a mouth freshener, is highly addictive. It is cheap, socially acceptable even in women (as against smoking), and consumed by millions of Indians (rich and poor alike), including children and adolescents. Gutka chewing is an important factor of the high prevalence of oral cancer in the sub continent. Another latest fad amongst teenage girls and boys in Indian metro cities is smoking the hookah (or the water pipe) in the numerous hookah bars, which are popular joints frequented by the youngsters. Water pipe smokers inhale dangerous levels of carbon monoxide, but users are blissfully unaware of the risks involved.

Dr Judith Mackay feels that women are not only vulnerable to misleading tobacco advertisements, but also to second hand smoke. A conservative society makes it difficult for Asian women to stand up against their smoker husbands/boyfriends. They are thus more prone to the health hazards of second hand smoke, even if they do not smoke themselves.

So it becomes imperative to evolve strategies to reduce, and eventually prevent, smoking and other forms of tobacco consumption by women and girls, with a view to protect and promote their health. Dr Mackay is of the opinion that school based awareness programmes can help only when they are co linked with other community based health programmes. She is emphatic that ‘stand alone’ school programmes do not work. The health knowledge of smokers and non smokers is just the same. So it is actually meaningless to tell adolescents that smoking is a health hazard- that it causes cancer and other life threatening diseases. Not only students, but all adults (be they teachers, parents, visitors) should be prohibited from smoking within school campuses.

Who would know it better than Dr Mackay that such school programmes, and/or a ban on sale of tobacco products to minors are actually supported by the tobacco industry and just do not deliver the desired results. She rightly feels that the tobacco industry is manipulating kids like puppets on strings. So, a more meaningful strategy would be to bring about a change in youth attitudes indirectly -- to make them realize that smoking is not cool, but a horrible habit; that although smoking is sold as freedom by the tobacco industry, it is actually a bondage; that freedom is about making correct and right choices without the fear of losing friends; that courage is about saying NO to smoking and yet remain friends.

According to Judith, only stringent economic measures, coupled with multi component (including social behaviour) school programmes would work. Increasing the price tag on cigarettes to the extent of making it unaffordable to most adolescents is the single most important initiative to restrict access to tobacco among children and adolescents. Along with this, there is a crying need for stricter implementation of anti tobacco legislation. A mere burgeoning of anti tobacco laws (with very little compliance) has a very adverse effect on the children’s psyche, as they grow up thinking that laws are meant to be disregarded. This would breed only lawless citizens. Sale of tobacco products to minors should not only be banned, but any violation of this law should attract the penalty of losing one’s license for ever.

Let more women join the likes of Dr Judith Mackay in this battle against tobacco, by standing up against the fatal attractions of the tobacco industry. We need to become role models for our rudderless adolescents, by practicing and not merely preaching about a cigarette/tobacco free and healthy society.


Shobha Shukla
(The author is the Honorary Editor of Citizen News Service (CNS), has worked earlier with State Planning Institute, UP, and teaches Physics at India's prestigious Loreto Convent. Email: shobha@citizen-news.org, website: www.citizen-news.org)

Published in:
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Thai-Indian News, Bangkok, Thailand
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka
Elites TV News, USA
Scoop News, New Zealand
Bihar and Jharkhand News Service (BJNS)
Northern Voice Online
Punjab News Online, Punjab
Digg.com
Twitter.com
Friendfeed.com
Facebook.com
Wikio.com
Iplextra.com
Allvoices.com

Omololu Falobi Award to Charles Shagi from Tanzania

To listen to the audio podcast of 2010 Omololu Falobi Award ceremony (at the M2010 closing ceremony) click here
"Omololu Falobi lived life only for 35 years. Yes he was in a hurry. He was a visionary. For those who knew him they would realize that this conference was part of his vision. M2010 is a turning point where it has become glaringly obvious that developing and rolling out new HIV prevention technologies is as much about community voices, politics, media, culture as it is about science. That's what Omololu thought of, that's what he dreamed of" said Manju Chatani Gada, at the closing ceremony of the International Microbicides Conference (M2010) in Pittsburgh, USA. Manju represents AVAC: Global Advocacy for HIV Prevention, African Microbicides Advocacy Coalition (AMAG) and has demonstrated a rich experience of community-centric responses to AIDS globally. Read more


"Omololu was killed in October 2006 in Lagos, Nigeria. He was a powerful international activist, a gifted journalist, a friend, a father, and a force to be reckoned with when it came to community activism. He founded and led the Journalists' Against AIDS in Nigeria (JAAIDS) and was instrumental in establishing several coalitions including the New HIV Vaccine and Microbicides Advocacy Society. His vision was of Africans to have a say in the issues that affected their lives and community advocates everywhere to be involved in shaping the response to AIDS" said Manju Chatani Gada.

"The field is growing fast and changing and many new faces are in this room. Perhaps many of you may not have been privileged to know Omololu. But rest assured, some project you know of, some network you are part of, some journalist who has covered your research, was touched by him. His vision lives in in the form of Omololu Falobi Award for Excellence in HIV Prevention Community Advocacy" said Manju Chatani.

The award was created to have an ongoing legacy to recognize the commitment of HIV prevention research advocates. The award was established by the African Microbicides Advocacy Group (AMAG), in partnership with AVAC, the Global Campaign for Microbicides (GCM), Journalists Against AIDS (JAAIDS) and the New HIV Vaccine and Microbicides Advocacy Society. We thank a number of supporters including AMAG, AVAC, Family Health International (FHI), Global Campaign for Microbicides (GCM), NHVMAS and the joint United Nations programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS)

While sharing her memories of how the screening committee selected the 2010 Omololu Falobi Award for HIV Prevention Community Advocacy, Manju Chatani Gada said: "One member of the screening committee said 'it was an easy choice. He is an epitome of science meets advocacy'. The 2010 Omololu Falobi Award for HIV Prevention Community Advocacy goes to Charles Shagi from Tanzania."

"Omololu was an incredible man" said the inaugural recepient of 2008 Omololu Falobi Award for HIV Prevention Community Advocacy Lori Heise. "Charles' enthusiasm is infectious and he has been committed to helping recruit and mentor new people to the movement to expand the range of HIV prevention options," said Lori Heise, former Executive Director of the Global Campaign for Microbicides and one of the inaugural recipients of the award and member of the 2010 selection committee. "We need more people like Charles who can ably bridge the gap between researchers and community members."

I couldn't have agreed more for having had the privilege to work closely with Omololu in early 2000s on HIV prevention advocacy. Lori was indeed a symbolic choice for thousands of people at least who are committed to push HIV prevention advocacy on daily basis.

The 2010 recepient of Omololu Falobi Award for HIV Prevention Community Advocacy, Charles Shagi, is a community educator who developed innovative ways to link women in Tanzanian villages with life-saving HIV prevention information and with HIV prevention research trials. Charles Shagi, a Program Officer for the African Medical and Research Foundation based in Mwanza, Tanzania, was honored for his significant contributions to developing and sustaining community engagement and education programs that empower women and their communities to advocate from themselves and to become vital partners in HIV prevention research trials.

"Bringing HIV prevention research to communities is an essential part of our work to develop new HIV prevention options for men and women," said Sharon Hillier, Microbicides 2010 Co-chair and a member of the award selection committee. "Charles embodies what this award was created to recognize: leadership, commitment and passion in community advocacy. He works tirelessly not only to help women advocate on their own behalf and to become involved in research, but also to educate and empower researchers to understand the needs of women, their families and communities."

Charles works tirelessly not only to help women, their families and their communities advocate on their own behalf and to become involved in research.

"I am very humbled to accept this award, and for me, it really underscores the value this field put on the importance of reaching out to the women. – in the villages of Tanzania and around the world – who participate in these trials" said Shagi. "This award is important because it proves that people do care about them. It is the courage of those women that is being honored today. I look forward to continuing to share the voices and experiences of vulnerable women with the research and advocacy communities."

"I urge all HIV prevention researchers to listen to the community. There is need for all of us to change attitude, but especially the researchers and our leaders since we have a long walk left. Communities should be at the center of research, not at the periphery," Shagi added.

The Omololu Falobi Award highlights the essential role of community advocacy and leadership in HIV prevention research. It celebrates the life and values of the late Omololu Falobi, a long-time HIV advocate and journalist who founded Journalists Against AIDS in Nigeria, was an instrumental pioneer member of the Nigerian Treatment Access Movement, and co-founded the New HIV Vaccine & Microbicide Advocacy Society. Omololu was killed in Lagos, Nigeria in October 2006. The award was conceived as an ongoing legacy that recognizes his commitment and lasting contributions to HIV prevention research advocacy.

"Omololu was a visionary leader and activist, who accomplished much in his too short a life.  He dedicated himself to powerful advocacy for HIV and HIV prevention research in Nigeria, Africa and worldwide," said Funmi Doherty of NHVMAS in Nigeria. "It is gratifying to see his ideals and vision live on through this award. I know he would be immensely proud of the work that Charles and the past recipients are doing to simultaneously advance human rights and HIV prevention research."

Shagi was chosen from among an impressive group of almost 20 nominees by an independent international panel of HIV prevention research advocates, policy makers, and scientists. The selection committee noted his instrumental role in pioneering new ways to bring the voices of community members and participants into the research process.

Charles and his colleagues have also documented and published peer reviewed articles about their model for community representation and participation in HIV prevention trials among women.  This research is an important guide for those working on community engagement plans for HIV prevention trials around the world.

Bobby Ramakant - CNS

Monday, May 24, 2010

Not just a handmaiden: Critical role of social science in HIV Prevention Research

To listen to the audio podcast, click here
It is well understood that both the efficacy and effectiveness of HIV Prevention research trial products (such as microbicides) depends upon their actual use by the clinical trial participants. "Use is a function of human behaviour and action that is affected by an individual, interpersonal, social, and cultural factors that operate interactively in complex, dynamic and varied ways across settings" said Dr Judith D Auerbach, Vice President for Science and Public Policy at the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, USA. Read more


Dr Judith D Auerbach was speaking at the International Microbicides Conference (M2010) in Pittsburgh, USA (23-25 May 2010).

In HIV prevention research, it is the job of social and behavioural scientists sometimes in collaboration with biomedical scientists to unpack these complex, dynamic and interactive factors and the effect they had on promising biomedical tools.

Historically social and behavioural research has been conducted at the level of being adjunct or handmaiden in HIV prevention trials. "Its purpose is to elucidate the likelihood that clinical trial population in the first place and larger population in the second case, will take up a particular prevention tool as prescribed, to help assess the safety and efficacy of that particular prevention tool" said Judith.

In recent years there are a number of thoughtful articles written on the need on how best to integrate social research into the microbicides clinical trials from pre-clinical to safety and efficacy studies of vaginal and rectal products.

The experience of conducting clinical trials themselves has highlighted the key issues that are thought to affect the trial outcome like: acceptability, adherence, control, covert use and pregnancy.

There has been a great deal of research on acceptability in relation to vaginal products and much less in relation to rectal products.

Acceptability research both quantitative and qualitative is driven by a very theoretical model. It also includes questions like what attributes of product matter - like physical characteristics, the way it is used, perceived efficacy of a product, and other such factors.

What have we learnt from the research on acceptability? "We have learnt that acceptability is variable, by product, by population, by cultural belief and norm, by sexual practices, gender and relationship dynamics" said Judith.

"We have learnt that acceptability may change even in the course of the clinical trial. We have learnt that acceptability does have different attributes. We have also learnt that in case of hypothetical products, acceptability is not often the big predictor of actual use" said Judith D Auerbach, who had also received the 2008 Career Award from the Sociologists AIDS Network.

There is no doubt that adherence of clinical trial participants to using the product-being-researched, is of critical value. "If study products are not used by the study participants, in the way called for in the trial protocol, it becomes impossible to assess their true effects, alone or in relation to other products, in order to work. In the context of clinical trials, the adherence is measured by a number of techniques including biomarkers" shares Judith.

What have we learned from the adherence studies? "We have learnt that adherence rates are quite variable. We have also learnt that adherence needs to be measured differently in different settings. We have learnt that adherence is reported inconsistently by study participants" said Judith Auerbach, who had received the 2004 Feminist Activist Award from Sociologists for Women in Society, and the 2005 Mentor Award from the Public Leadership Education Network.


Dr Judith D Auerbach has served as the past Vice President, Public Policy and Programme Development, at American Foundation for AIDS Research (amFAR), and has also served in the past as Director of the Behavioural and Social Science Programme and HIV Prevention Science Coordinator in the Office of AIDS Research at the National Institute of Health (NIH).

Adherence varies within trials by sites, by participants, by partnership types, by sex acts, for instance.

Adherence depends upon study participants' understanding on how these products are to be used when there are more than one tool like condom and diaphragm, condom and gel. In fact, in a clinical trial (HPTN035), women study participants thought that the gel should only be used when condoms were also used. There were low level of exclusive gel use when condoms were not used. We have learnt that adherence is also affected by participants' belief about these products. Like in diaphragm study participants believed that diaphragm have already shown protection against HIV and condoms weren't necessary. Adherence is also affected by sexual and vaginal practices across populations and is affected by gender and relationship dynamics.

"Historically microbicides advocates believed that women need a product under their own control unlike male condom that is not under their control, and may like to use a product without the knowledge of their male partner" said Judith Auerbach. "We have learnt from research in this area that many women may like control and covert use of such products but not all. Desire for control and covert use vary by population, by culture, by setting, by sexual relationship. Control, as framed by many advocates, is an alien concept in many cultures. And covert use is often quite undesirable. In many settings women and their partners want sharing this decision making about using HIV prevention tools and this is a construct of their interpersonal and cultural frame, about gender and relationship dynamics, their sexual practices and their desire and pleasure" said Judith.

In trials involving women, pregnancy or potential pregnancy is problematic. Those who become pregnant are taken out of study.

Less or no data exists between effect of these products on pregnant women or their embryo and is also not helpful in the research trial considering the end point of the study.

Notwithstanding the fact that intending to get pregnant is an exclusion criteria, women in trials are encouraged to use one and increasingly two forms of contraceptions. Like in microbicides trials, pregnancy rates were between 4 to 40 per 100 woman years. This has implication for both the conduct and the interpretation of the trial. If the participants reduce the use of protective products, during pregnancy, it will affect the assessment of maximum detectable effectiveness of the product and also the lower detectable effectiveness of the product.

"Actually there is not that much behavioural or social research on pregnancy and perspectives of women participating in a trial. The notion of 'intention to get pregnant' may not be a very meaningful notion in many cultural contexts. We have learnt that fertility and parenthood, desires and expectations of women and their male partners, their values and religion, cultures and other such factors are strong and often override the public health benefits of prevention" said Judith.

"We have also learnt that asking women to use triple or even quadruple protection may be unrealistic and unreasonable in fact" said Judith.

Undoubtedly, social and behavioural research is absolutely critical to understanding these issues around acceptability, adherence, control, covert use and pregnancy, in the context of clinical trials. These issues signify other deeper and social cultural realities, they characterize the context in which these prevention tools are introduced, modified and incorporated by individuals and communities, and will continue to limit the efficacy of products in a clinical research trial. These realities are themselves not addressed generally in a clinical trial.

"It is much more useful to look at practices rather than behaviours. The term practices convey the social dimension of the behaviours" said Judith. Practical and socially induced behaviours are usually organized by culture. Sexual and other behaviours related to HIV prevention are characterised by social norms.

"Sexual practices for example are influenced by prevailing norms and structures related to gender, love, intimacy, sexuality, pleasure, fertility and family" said Judith Auerbach.

"As an example, in a rectal microbicide acceptability study, there were interviews conducted on unprotected anal intercourse with men - HIV seropositive or serostatus unknown. One of the notion was that women must engage in anal sex coerced by their male partner but these interviews show that women weren't being coerced into having anal sex rather acted on their own behalf or in their own interest. Rather they follow the sexual script that allows the male partner to take the initiative in initiating anal sex, that women actually find enjoyable as it brings pleasure, intimacy, it is in some ways exceptional and therefore exciting sexual practice, and it allows them to please their partner" said Judith.

Where women are involved, sexual practices may get affected by vaginal practices such as washing, douching, drying etc. These practices are quite wide spread in countries in Africa where microbicides clinical trials are also currently occurring. These practices are related to norms, values and hygiene.
In general the expectation is that the woman's vagina should be dry allowing optimal protection and sensation during sex.

"We also learnt that these practices are linked to social norms, values, beliefs, that challenged the study to assess effectiveness of certain HIV prevention tools" said Judith.

HIV is a relational matter but very little research has been done on dynamics of relationship.

Women usually incorporate gels and other prevention tools during a study, into their own sexual and vaginal practices. Similarly a survey on use of lubricants during anal sex, found that 60% of respondents added another substance in the lubricant they use, often spit or saliva, during anal sex. So people will incorporate these new prevention technologies into their existing practices.

Medical research is socially embedded and is affected by social relation. "Social science can interrogate how the technology has been incorporated by the people and communities and it can elucidate how medical research and participants' practices are intertwined" said Judith.

"The in-depth interviews conducted with women trial participants, fundamentally challenged some of the normative concepts we have in microbicides clinical trial research around acceptability, covert use, dry sex among others. For example they found that women want to involve their male partners in gel use. Although the women hope that the gel may prevent HIV they are just as interested in a product that may enhance sexual pleasure for themselves and their partners. The binding in the gel increased sexual pleasure and surprised the researchers because of the prevalent norm of dry sex in these communities" said Judith.

Over the gel use enhancing sexual pleasure and sexual gratification, providing a greater level of intimacy for both women and men, it helps enhance and secure women's relationship. Some women described how their partners no longer went to other women, or how their husbands are paying much more attention.

It is beyond doubt that social science research is not just a handmaiden to biomedical research in HIV prevention. The biomedical research in HIV prevention should be complemented and informed by non-trial focus social science research.

Using ARVs to Prevent HIV Could Result in Drug Resistance

Their scientific methods may have been quite different, but their conclusions were not. In asking whether drug resistance could be a problem if antiretroviral (ARV) drugs become a mainstay for HIV prevention, the two studies - one involving a mathematical model and the other assays of cells and tissue - arrived at the same answer. Resistance could happen if people who are unknowingly already infected use the approach. The results of these studies, which were reported today at the International Microbicides Conference (M2010) in Pittsburgh, USA, underscore the importance of incorporating routine HIV testing and ongoing monitoring of infection status in any prevention program that involves the use of ARVs. Read more



Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), as the approach is called, involves the use of ARVs by HIV-negative people in order to reduce their risk of infection. Several clinical trials are testing whether PrEP can prevent HIV in different high-risk populations. With PrEP, a single ARV is used, typically once a day. While one ARV has the potential to prevent HIV in someone who is uninfected, one drug alone is not enough to suppress virus in someone who is infected, which is why at least three different ARVs, used in combination, are required in the treatment of HIV. If a person who is infected continues taking a single drug, the concern is that virus would become resistant to that drug or drugs in the same class, thereby limiting treatment options in the future.

The current research does not diminish the promise of PrEP and other ARV-based prevention approaches, the researchers say. What the studies provide is a more clear view of what is likely to be needed to ensure that PrEP can offer the most benefit to as many people as possible and with the least amount of risk. It is likely that any successful HIV prevention program which includes the use of ARVs will require routine screening for HIV in order to prevent HIV-infected people from inadvertently using PrEP when they are already infected.

Mathematical model identifies key factors that would influence spread of HIV drug resistance
if ARVs are used for prevention
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a promising HIV prevention approach that involves use of antiretroviral (ARV) drugs by HIV-uninfected individuals to protect against infection. But, should clinical trials find the strategy successful and PrEP is then rolled out as a prevention approach in at-risk communities, there is concern that virus resistant to the ARVs potentially would emerge and spread. Indeed, a mathematical model found that if people who are already HIV-infected inadvertently use PrEP, drug resistance is very likely to occur. The finding underscores the importance of routine HIV testing and ongoing monitoring of infection status being a part of any PrEP program, says Ume Abbas, M.D., of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, who led the study.

Dr. Abbas and colleagues developed a model to simulate the impact of PrEP on HIV prevention and drug resistance in a region of sub-Saharan Africa, where HIV rates are among the highest, and to identify the determinants contributing most to HIV drug resistance prevalence. The model singled out two factors having the most influence, finding that the greater number of people who use PrEP who shouldn’t be and the longer they keep using the ARVs, the more prevalent drug resistance would be.

The model looked at different scenarios, including ones representative of the most pessimistic and the most optimistic situations. The optimistic scenario assumed that PrEP reduced the risk of infection by 75 percent, that 60 percent of the at-risk population used it, and 5 percent of the population of individuals who are already infected inadvertently used it. Under these conditions, the model predicted the prevalence of resistance after 10 years to be only 2.5 percent of the population. Under the pessimistic scenario, which assumed a 25 percent reduction in HIV risk with PrEP, 15 percent of the at-risk population being covered and 25 percent of those already infected using PrEP, resistance was expected to affect 40 percent of the population in 10 years. The model took into account age, gender, sexual activity, HIV status, stages of disease and PrEP use and discontinuation and HIV drug susceptibility.

Laboratory studies find ARV-based gels protect against infection with resistant virus
Researchers testing whether antiretroviral (ARV)- based candidate microbicides are effective against strains of HIV known to be resistant to these ARVs and/or drugs in the same class found they were indeed protective in laboratory studies. And in other tests trying to determine whether use of ARV-based microbicides could contribute to the emergence of drug resistant virus, they determined the possibility could exist if HIV infection was already present. Granted, experiments conducted in a laboratory cannot with any certainty predict what will be true in real-life settings, but the results are encouraging nonetheless, says Susan M. Schader, a doctoral student at McGill University and the McGill AIDS Centre in Montreal, Canada. Four ARV-based candidate microbicides were studied, including tenofovir and dapivirine, which belong to a class of ARVs called reverse transcriptase inhibitors that act on a key enzyme HIV needs for replicating itself. Tenofovir gel has already been tested in one clinical trial and another large clinical trial is underway, while a phase III trial of dapivirine is being planned. The researchers also looked at DS001 and DS003, which are in earlier phases of development as potential microbicides for preventing sexual transmission of HIV. Both are entry inhibitors that prevent HIV from getting inside cells by targeting specific docking stations on the cell surface.

There are at least nine known genetic subtypes of HIV-1. In the United States and Canada, most HIV infections are with the B subtype strain, while elsewhere in the world all other subtypes are predominant. Resistant virus is categorized accordingly. As the availability and use of ARVs increases in places like Africa, drug resistance will increasingly be more common. And people who develop resistance could feasibly infect others with virus that is drug-resistant. So, the researchers looked at how well each of the ARVs worked alone and in different combinations against cell cultures containing B subtype drug-resistant virus and three strains of non-B subtype resistant virus. They found each of the four candidate microbicide ARVs potent against the drug-resistant strains, although the ARV combinations (dapivirine plus tenofovir and dapivirine plus DS003) were more effective than any one drug. Interestingly, dapivirine and tenofovir used together was more effective against HIV resistant to dapivirine when compared to each drug used alone and to wild type HIV. To evaluate whether the ARV-based microbicide compounds could cause virus to become drug resistant, the researchers infected blood cells with different subtypes of HIV and exposed the infected cells to dapivirine alone and to dapivirine plus tenofovir continuously for more than 25 weeks to induce drug resistance. Drug resistance emerged only if HIV infection was present before the candidate microbicide ARVs were introduced and continued to be used.


Bobby Ramakant - CNS


Published in:
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
News Trust News, New Delhi, Delhi
Elites TV News, USA
Unitedproject.org, USA
Wikio.com, UK
Esciencenews.com
Sciencecodex.com
Iplextra.indiatimes.com
Webclipper.handsnet.org
Genengnews.com
Twitter.com
Friendfeed.com
Wildmusic.org
Healthhive.com

Microbicides that do more than gel

A flexible ring containing two anti-HIV drugs showed in laboratory tests that it can deliver therapeutic levels of both drugs for up to 30 days, researchers reported at the International Microbicides Conference (M2010) in Pittsburgh, USA, adding that they consider the ring near ready for testing of its safety in women. Read more



Vaginal rings have been used to deliver contraceptives and now this strategy is being applied for delivering formulations of microbicides to protect against HIV. Unlike gels that must be used every day or at the time of sex, rings can be inserted into the vagina and stay in for a month or longer. And, for certain drugs or drug combinations, these formulations may be the more optimal vehicles for delivery.

Another option to deliver drugs with less fuss or muss, are quick-dissolve films. In one study presented today, researchers described their progress in developing a vaginal film – smaller than a stick of gum and as thin as a sheet of paper – that after insertion into the vagina would melt away and disperse drug to cells to protect against HIV. Laboratory tests of a similar approach – an almond-shaped vaginal tablet – found the tablets dissolved quickly yet still delivered sustained levels of anti-HIV drugs over several hours.

Vaginal ring with two anti-HIV drugs nears benchmark for clinical testing of its safety in women
An intravaginal ring formulated with two anti-HIV drugs – dapivirine and maraviroc – can deliver therapeutic levels of both drugs for as long as a month, according to laboratory studies. Based on these and other findings, the ring is a good candidate for testing in clinical safety trials, reported Andrew Loxley, Ph.D., from Particle Sciences, Inc., of Bethlehem, Pa. Vaginal rings are small, flexible devices designed to allow for the slow delivery of a drug or multiple drugs over time. As a potential method for preventing sexual transmission of HIV, rings are seen as an alternative to microbicide gels that must be used every day or at the time of sex. Dapivirine, also known as TMC-120, belongs to a class of anti-HIV drugs called non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors that bind to and disable HIV’s reverse transcriptase enzyme, a protein that HIV needs to make more copies of itself. Maraviroc is a type of drug called an entry inhibitor that prevents HIV from entering a healthy cell. The current study indicates that inside the vaginal ring, the two drugs work well side-by-side with the activity and structure of each drug not being affected by the presence of the other. High amounts of each drug were still being released from the ring at 15 days and continued to be delivered for up to 30 days. Even after being stored in harsh conditions for six months, both drugs maintained their stability and structure, suggesting that under more normal temperature conditions, the rings remain viable for a year or even longer. The rings are made of a type of plastic called ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer (EVA) and share many of the same properties as rings currently used for contraception. They are manufactured using standard processes called hot metal extrusion and injection molding. If clinical trials prove the rings safe and effective, manufacturing and scale-up should be relatively easy, say the researchers who made the rings with the support of the International Partnership for Microbicides (IPM).

Early studies suggest promise for vaginal tablet containing ARV combination
Seeking an alternative to microbicides in the form of the more traditional gel, researchers have developed an almond-shaped vaginal tablet that according to laboratory tests can dissolve quickly and deliver sustained levels of anti-HIV drugs over 12 hours. Additional studies will be needed before it can be considered for testing in clinical trials for its safety and effectiveness for preventing sexual transmission of HIV in women, reported Dr Sanjay Garg, Ph.D., an associate professor in the School of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. The research, which was conducted in collaboration with the International Partnership for Microbicides (IPM) focused on combining two antiretroviral (ARV) drugs – dapivirine, a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; and an entry inhibitor called DS003 – into a vaginal tablet formulation. Dapivirine has already been formulated as a vaginal ring and a gel, both of which are being tested in early phase clinical trials, while DS003 (BMS 793) is in earlier development as a candidate microbicide. The vaginal tablet is based on a pharmaceutically acceptable bioadhesive polymer that binds to the moist lining inside the vagina, allowing the drug to transfer to key cells that comprise the epithelium. In their studies, Dr. Garg and colleagues demonstrated it is feasible to formulate a vaginal tablet containing the two ARVs and that the formulation is stable and the drugs are compatible. Moreover, they showed that the tablet dissolves within three minutes yet the steady, slow delivery of drug was sustained for several hours from the dispersion formed. Next steps include performing toxicology studies of the vaginal tablet.

Vaginal film with novel dual-action ARV passes early laboratory tests
IQP-0528 is a new antiretroviral (ARV) compound that although is classified as a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, works against HIV in two ways. It prevents HIV from entering a cell and inhibits the activity of reverse transcriptase, a key enzyme that HIV needs in order to make more copies of itself. Now, researchers report they have developed a potential microbicide containing this novel ARV. But rather than formulate the drug as a traditional gel, the researchers created a vaginal film smaller than a stick of gum and as thin as a sheet of paper. Laboratory tests indicate it is potent against HIV, non-toxic to cells and that it can dissolve quickly to release nearly all the compound. The results suggest the film formulation is worth further study as a topical microbicide for the prevention of HIV infection, reported Anthony Ham, Ph.D., who led the study for ImQuest BioSciences of Frederick, Md. The film is made of a thin polyvinyl alcohol polymer, a water-soluble synthetic plastic used in multiple consumer and biomedical products, including contraceptive films, contact lens solutions and mouthwash strips. Many believe that when it comes to a microbicide for preventing HIV, women will prefer using a vaginal film over a gel, especially if a long-acting formula allowed for less frequent use. To evaluate the potential of IQP-0528 as a vaginal film, the researchers performed a series of tests. In those looking at its antiviral activity, IQP-0528 films were found effective against multiple strains of HIV. Other tests indicated the film was not toxic to cells and had no negative effect on normal vaginal flora. The film visibly disintegrated in solution within 10 minutes and within the same time period a sufficient level of drug was released from the film to have activity against HIV. Results of these early laboratory tests are encouraging but will need to be validated in further studies.


Bobby Ramakant - CNS


Published in:
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
News Trust News, New Delhi
Eurekalert.org
Sciencecodex.com
Scienceblog.com
escience.com
Webclipper.handsnet.org
Panglobus.com
Generef.com
Msg.com
Enter Price Post News
Iplextra.Indiatimes.com
Microbeworld.com
Thoora.com
Topsy.com
Redtram.com
Columbus.com
Friendfeed.com

Pregnancy Doubles HIV Risk in Men; First Trial of a Microbicide in Pregnant Women

Young women of reproductive-age are among those at greatest risk of acquiring HIV, and several studies have suggested that during pregnancy women are even more susceptible to infection. Now, a new study finds that pregnancy is a time when men also are at greater risk. In fact, their risk doubles if their partner is both HIV-infected and pregnant. Read more



The results were presented at the International Microbicides Conference (M2010) in Pittsburgh, USA, along with findings of a pivotal study that is the first to ask whether using a microbicide during pregnancy is safe for women and their babies. Between 70 and 90 percent of all HIV infections in women are acquired through heterosexual intercourse, and women are twice as likely as their male partners to acquire HIV during sex, due in part to biological factors that make them more susceptible. Many women remain sexually active during pregnancy. Although correct and consistent use of male condoms has been shown to prevent HIV infection, women often cannot or do not wish to negotiate condom use with their male partners. And for many women, especially those who wish to become pregnant, abstinence is not an option they can consider. Microbicides -- substances designed to be applied topically on the inside of the rectum or vagina – are under active investigation as a method for women to use to protect against HIV.

Pregnancy doubles HIV risk in men, study finds
While a number of studies have shown that during pregnancy women are at increased risk of acquiring HIV from an infected partner, a new study has found pregnancy is a time when men also are at greater risk – double the risk, in fact. The study, which involved 3,321 couples in which one partner was HIV-infected and the other not, is the first to show that a man in a relationship with an HIV-positive woman has a greater chance of becoming infected while she is pregnant than when she is not.

Even after accounting for behavioral and other factors that usually contribute to HIV risk, the increased risk associated with pregnancy remained. Biological changes that occur during pregnancy may make women more infectious than they would be otherwise, explains Nelly Mugo, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of Nairobi & Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi and the University of Washington in Seattle, who presented results of the study on behalf of the Partners in Prevention HSV/HIV Transmission Study team. The study was conducted in Botswana, Kenya, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.

The researchers followed for up to two years 1,085 couples in which the male was infected and 2,236 couples in which the female was infected to understand the different circumstances and determinants that may contribute to HIV risk. During this time, 823 pregnancies took place, which allowed the researchers to look more closely at the particular risk factors for HIV that occur during pregnancy and not. In their analysis, they found that pregnancy was associated with increased risk of both female-to-male and male-to-female HIV transmission. But for women with an HIV- infected partner, the study found that factors other than pregnancy also likely contributed to this increased risk, such as sexual behavior. In men, however, the link between pregnancy and HIV risk was much clearer, even after considering whether or not they had engaged in unprotected sex or were circumcised. Measures of viral load and CD4 counts of the infected partner also had no bearing. Increased female-to-male transmission of HIV during pregnancy may be due to physiological and immunological changes that occur with pregnancy, the authors conclude, but more research will be needed to confirm this hypothesis.

Microbicide study in pregnant women takes a giant baby step for HIV prevention research
Results of the first study of a vaginal microbicide tested in pregnant women found only small amounts of drug are absorbed into the bloodstream, amniotic fluid and umbilical cord blood. The study, which involved applying a single dose of tenofovir gel hours before women gave birth by cesarean delivery, was conducted as a first step toward determining if use of a vaginal microbicide during pregnancy is safe for women and their babies. The findings support continuing with further studies of tenofovir gel in pregnant women, said Richard Beigi, M.D, MSc., of the University of Pittsburgh and Magee-Womens Hospital of UPMC, who led the study for the Microbicide Trials Network.

The active ingredient in tenofovir gel is an antiretroviral that is approved as an oral drug and used as part of the standard HIV treatment regimen. Both research and clinical experience with the oral drug have indicated its use is safe in HIV-infected women during pregnancy. In previous studies looking at the use of oral tenofovir for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, researchers found that low amounts of drug pass to the baby. In the current trial, which involved healthy, uninfected pregnant women, the amount of drug found in umbilical cord blood was 40-times lower than cord blood levels noted in these other studies after oral dosing, and the amount that got absorbed into the maternal blood was at levels 50- to 100-times lower.

Young women of reproductive-age are among those who are at greatest risk of acquiring HIV. Pregnancy is a time when they may be even more susceptible. Because no information has been available to know whether using a candidate microbicide during pregnancy is safe, women who participate in clinical trials must use contraception, and if women become pregnant, they must stop using study product– at a time when protection may be needed the most. In this study, gel containing a single dose (40 mg) of tenofovir gel was applied in 16 healthy HIV-negative women approximately two hours before they gave birth by scheduled caesarean delivery. Researchers took maternal blood samples before and up to 24 hours after the gel was applied and collected samples of the amniotic fluid surrounding the baby, umbilical cord blood, placental tissue and uterine tissue. In addition to finding very low levels of drug, the researchers also reported there were no serious side effects attributed to the gel in either the mothers or their newborns. Based on these results, researchers now plan to conduct a larger study of tenofovir gel in both pregnant and breastfeeding women.
------


More than 33 million people are living with HIV, more than two thirds of them in sub-Saharan Africa, according to UNAIDS. The number of new infections continues to outstrip advances in treatment: For every two people who begin treatment, five are newly infected. Globally, women account for half of all HIV infections, and in sub-Saharan Africa, women comprise 60 percent of all infected adults. Young women are especially vulnerable. In southern Africa women aged 15 to 24 are at least three times more likely than their male peers to be infected with HIV. Meanwhile, men who have sex with men (MSM) bear the burden of the epidemic in the United States and in other parts of the world, such as Europe, Latin America, Australia and New Zealand. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, MSM of all races is the only risk group in the United States in which new HIV infections are increasing. Black heterosexual women represent the third highest risk group in the United States, after white MSM and black MSM, respectively.


Bobby Ramakant - CNS


Published in:
Citizen New Service (CNS), India/Thailand
News Trust News, New Delhi, Delhi
Eurekalert.com
Sciencedaily.com
Scienceblog.com
esciencenews.com
Physorg.com
Healthdev.net
Techoat.com
Organizedwisdom.com
Firstsciencenews.com
Everydayplasticsblog.com
The Dallas Morning News, Dallas
Iplextranews.com
Medcomparenews.com
Onenewpage.com
Thoora.com
Currentweather.info
Newpond.com
CWEB News
West Africa Doctors Network (WADN)
Friendfeed.com
Mensmopolitan.com
Itexmall health and fitness