| New 
Clinical Trial Tests Tenofovir Vaginal Gel and Truvada Tablets as HIV Prevention 
Strategy for Women in Africa 
 
 |  | The 
U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) is sponsoring a large trial to explore 
whether the antiretroviral agents tenofovir 
(Viread) and emtricitabine (Emtriva), 
the components of the Truvada coformulation), can prevent HIV infection in women 
when used in a vaginal gel or taken as once-daily oral tablets. This is the first 
microbicide efficacy trial microbicide in which women apply the gel once-daily, 
rather than shortly before sex. | 
 | 
 
 The 
following is the text of an NIH announcement about the new trial:
 A 
new, large-scale clinical trial is examining whether antiretroviral medications 
normally used to treat HIV infection can also prevent HIV infection in women when 
applied as a vaginal gel or taken as oral tablets once daily.
 
 
  The 
study, called Vaginal and Oral Interventions to Control the Epidemic (VOICE) or 
MTN-003, will involve up to 5,000 HIV-uninfected women at risk for HIV infection 
in four African countries. The trial will test the safety and efficacy of two 
different HIV prevention strategies: an investigational microbicide gel containing 
the antiretroviral drug tenofovir, and oral tablets containing tenofovir or a 
combination of tenofovir and emtricitabine 
known by the brand name Truvada. The tablets would be taken prior to exposure 
in an approach known as pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP. Testing a microbicide 
and PrEP in the same trial will enable scientists to directly compare the two 
strategies in terms of their safety and acceptability. Notably, 
the VOICE study is the first efficacy study of an investigational microbicide 
in which participants apply the gel once daily rather than shortly before sexual 
intercourse. If found effective, this approach would allow participants to choose 
whether to use the gel in association with sexual activity or at another time 
of day, permitting greater privacy and convenience of use. "We 
need multiple, scientifically proven HIV prevention strategies acceptable to different 
populations to effectively combat the spread of the virus, and PrEP and microbicides 
are two promising approaches that we are actively pursuing," says Anthony 
S. Fauci, MD, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases 
(NIAID). "The VOICE study is designed to answer multiple crucial questions 
about these experimental interventions, with an emphasis on protecting women from 
HIV." NIAID 
is sponsoring and funding the trial with co-funding from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver 
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institute 
of Mental Health, all components of the National Institutes of Health. Co-sponsors 
are Gilead Sciences Inc. of Foster City, Calif., and CONRAD of Arlington, Va. 
The NIH-funded Microbicide 
Trials Network is conducting the study.  Women 
make up half of all people worldwide living with HIV, and in sub-Saharan Africa, 
women represent nearly 60 percent of adults living with the virus. In most cases, 
women become infected with HIV through sexual intercourse with an infected male 
partner. An effective microbicide or PrEP regimen could give women an HIV prevention 
method they control. This would be particularly helpful in situations where it 
is difficult or impossible for women to refuse sex or negotiate condom use with 
their male partners.
 The 
VOICE study is being conducted at 14 sites in South Africa, Uganda, Zambia and 
Zimbabwe. The Phase IIb study, which will last approximately three and a half 
years, is being led by Zvavahera Mike Chirenje, MD, of the University of Zimbabwe 
in Harare, and Jeanne Marrazzo, MD, MPH, of the University of Washington in Seattle. 
The sexually active, HIV-uninfected women ages 18 to 45 participating in the study 
will be randomly assigned to one of five regimens, each performed once daily: 	
 Applying tenofovir gel vaginally 
  Applying a placebo gel vaginally 
  Taking a tenofovir pill and a placebo pill 
  Taking a tenofovir/emtricitabine pill and a placebo pill 
  Taking two placebo pills
 Neither 
the investigators nor the participants will know who receives the active gel or 
tablets and who receives the placebos. Gilead Sciences is providing tenofovir 
and tenofovir/emtricitabine tablets at no cost, and CONRAD is providing tenofovir 
gel and gel applicators free of charge. Study 
staff will follow the participants for 14 to 35 months. The investigators will 
compare the number of women in each group who acquire HIV during the study to 
determine whether the microbicide or either PrEP regimen is markedly more effective 
than the corresponding placebo in preventing HIV infection. Safety 
will be monitored closely throughout the study. Designed according to the most 
rigorous standards of international medical practice and ethics, the VOICE study 
contains numerous measures, beginning at the site level, intended to protect the 
safety and well-being of participants. This includes a multi-tiered safety review 
process with strict U.S. and international procedures for monitoring and reporting 
of adverse events. Also, all participants will receive regular HIV testing and 
risk-reduction counseling; condoms; and testing for sexually transmitted infections. 
Staff will refer any participant who acquires HIV or a sexually transmitted infection 
during the study to appropriate treatment and care in her community. In 
addition to testing tenofovir gel and PrEP for safety and efficacy, the VOICE 
study aims to determine which regimen-pill or gel-women are likely to follow more 
consistently, and whether either intervention influences participants' risk-taking 
behavior. The study also will assess how frequently participants who acquire HIV 
during the trial develop resistance to tenofovir or tenofovir/emtricitabine. The 
premise behind PrEP is that taking an antiretroviral drug before exposure to HIV 
could potentially inhibit HIV replication immediately after exposure to the virus, 
thwarting permanent infection. This strategy is used globally to successfully 
prevent the transmission of HIV from mother to infant. A 
companion study at the Uganda and Zimbabwe clinical trial sites involving 300 
women assigned to the tablet groups will examine the potential effects, if any, 
of oral tenofovir on bone density in HIV-uninfected women. A second companion 
study will examine household and community-level factors associated with adherence 
to the VOICE study products.
 For more information about the VOICE study, 
see Questions 
and Answers: The VOICE HIV Prevention Study.
 
 For additional information 
about NIAID's HIV/AIDS prevention research, visit the HIV/AIDS 
portal.
 9/22/09 SourceNational 
Institutes of Health. New Clinical Trial of Antiretroviral-based HIV Prevention 
Strategies for Women Now Under Way. NIH News. September 18, 2009.
                                       |