Meds lower risk of HIV in couples having condomless sex: study

Antiretroviral therapy vastly lowers the risk of spreading HIV for couples in which one partner has the virus and the other does not, even when they have condomless sex, researchers said
Antiretroviral therapy vastly lowers the risk of spreading HIV
for couples in which one partner has the virus and the other does not,
even when they have condomless sex, researchers said Tuesday.
The
study in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) is the
largest of its kind to examine the question of how risky it is for
so-called serodiscordant couples to have unprotected sex when the
infected partner is suppressing his or her viral load with medication.
The research involved 900 couples — about two thirds of whom were men who have sex with men and the rest were heterosexual.
After
a median of 1.3 years, the study found no cases in which the
HIV-positive partner, who was taking medication to suppress the virus,
infected the partner.
There were, however, 11
cases in which a partner who was HIV negative at the start of the study
became infected with the virus that causes AIDS.
Ten of these cases involved gay men.
Researchers said eight of the newly HIV-positive partners admitted to having had unprotected sex outside the relationship.
In
no cases could the person's HIV infection be molecularly matched to the
partner's, giving researchers an in-couple transmission rate of zero.
However, they cautioned, more follow-up is needed.
NOT A DIRECT ANSWER
"Although
these results cannot directly provide an answer to the question of
whether it is safe for serodifferent couples to practice condomless sex,
this study provides informative data (especially for heterosexuals) for
couples to base their personal acceptability of risk on," said the
study, led by Alison Rodger of University College London.
An
accompanying editorial in JAMA by Eric Daar and Katya Corado of the
Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, warned that couples should not take the
study to mean that their risk of transmission is zero.
"For
individuals who want to routinely or intermittently not use condoms
with an HIV-infected partner, clinicians can indicate that the risk of
HIV transmission appears small in the setting of continued viral
suppression," they wrote.
The HIV-positive
partner should be using antiretrovirals for at least six months before
the couple engages in condomless sex, they said.
"Moreover,
clinicians need to be clear that even though the overall risk for HIV
transmission may be small, the risk is not zero and the actual number is
not known, especially for higher-risk groups such as MSM" (men who have
sex with men).
They added that "more research is needed with larger numbers of couples and longer follow-up."
The
condomless sex occurred during periods when the HIV-positive partner
had HIV-1 RNA load less than 200 copies/milliliter, said the study.
The research was carried out at 75 clinical sites in 14 European countries from 2010 to 2014.
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