As drug-resistant HIV strains become What would need to change more common it will increasingly if PEP for sexual exposure 1. HIV Post-Exposure Prophylaxis: Guidance from impact on PEP’s effectiveness and was to become more widely the UK Chief Medical Officers’ Expert Advisory Group on AIDS (Dept of Health guidelines on PEP the need for resistance-testing of available?
for occupational exposure; revised February 2004);
‘source’ individuals.
available at: www.advisorybodies.doh.gov.uk/eaga/
prophylaxisguidancefeb04.pdf (includes details of
Won’t demand for PEP
drugs prescribed for PEP and side effects). 2. Guidelines for PEP following sexual exposure will
be available from the British Association for Sexual
Health & HIV and its web site www.bashh.org
outside populations seen as ‘high risk’. 3. Of 702 individuals in a Californian study receiving
PEP following possible sexual or IV drug-use
• It is important that community
exposure 7 people (or 1%) went on to become
based organisations both “sell”
infected. All 7 were gay men receiving PEP
and advocate for the BASHH
following receptive anal intercourse (average timebetween exposure and first PEP dose was 45.5
guidelines. The CHAPS partnership
hours). Two of the men had poor adherence to PEP,
can play a crucial role in this.
that of another was 'fair'. All 7 had unprotected
anal intercourse in the 6 months prior to receiving
• As part of a national programme
PEP. Between PEP starting and their sero-
on PEP, mass media adverts and
conversion one reported additional high risk
small media leaflets will be made
behaviour with a known HIV positive partner and 2
available. There will also be
did so with partners of unknown status. Roland ME et al. Seroconversion following non-occupational telephone and website-based Post-exposure prophylaxis. Eleventh Conference information provision.
on Retroviruses & Opportunistic Infections, San
• There is a clear need for training and development around PEP 4. Details of cohort studies of people receiving PEP Where will the money
after sexual exposure can be found in HIV & AIDS for PEP come from? following sexual exposure and/or Treatment Directory December 2002, National the BASHH guidelines, for GUM AIDS Manual, London pp 139-140. practitioners, GPs, A&E departments 5. Katz M et al. Post-exposure treatment of people and people delivering or involved exposed to the human immunodeficiency virus in the day-to-day implementation through sexual contact or injection-drug use.
New England Journal of Medicine 336:1097-
of HIV prevention interventions to 6. Vittinghoff E et al. Per-contact risk of human • The CHAPS national programme immunodeficiency virus transmission between on PEP must be targeted at both male sexual partners. American Journal of high prevalence areas and high- Will people become risk subgroups of homosexually 7. Sick leave and loss of production due to side effects
is another factor and one Canadian study of PEP
repeat users of PEP? active men.
involving protease inhibitors estimated this added
cost to be equivalent to the cost of the PEP drugs. McLeod et al. Absenteeism adds significant cost to HIV needlestick prophylaxis. XIV International
AIDS Conference, Barcelona, abstract TuPeE5167, 2002.
PEP, a (short-term) multi-agency specialist
8. For a cost-effectiveness analysis of the San
Francisco PEP programme see Steven D. Pinkertonet al Cost-effectiveness of Postexposure Prophylaxis After Sexual or Injection-Drug Exposure to Human Immunodeficiency Virus,
Archives of Internal Medicine 2004 164:46-54(http:// archinte. ama-assn.org/ cgi/ content/abstract/164/1/46). 9. Harrison LH et al. Post-sexual exposure February 2004. chemoprophylaxis (PEP) for HIV: a prospective cohort study of behavioural impact. Eighth Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Contributors: David Reid, Sigma Research,
Infections, Chicago, abstract 225, 2001.
Julian Meldrum, Gay Men’s and Living Well
10. Preliminary data from the 2003 National Gay
with HIV teams at Terrence Higgins Trust, London. Men’s Sex Survey, London, Sigma Research. Terrence Higgins Trust 52-54 Grays Inn Road, London WC1X 8JU Tel: 020 7831 0330 Fax: 020 7816 4552 Email: [email protected] Website: www.tht.org.uk Helpline: 020 7242 1010 12 noon – 10pm daily Terrence Higgins Trust is a registered charity no. 288527 Company Reg. no.1778149. Registered in England. A company limited by guarantee PEP: Post Exposure Prophylaxis following sexual exposure to HIV Post Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) has been available to health workers exposed to HIV for many years; it has been far less available to people exposed sexually. This briefing, primarily for sexual health promotion workers, focuses on PEP following sexual exposure. It does not address PEP for health workers following occupational exposure (e.g. needlestick injury or contact with blood), nor does it go into detail about drugs prescribed for PEP. Information on these are signposted at the end of the briefing.
The first UK guidelines for PEP following sexual exposure are in development, with publication by the British Association
for Sexual Health & HIV (BASHH) due in 2004 and available through the association’s web site www.bashh.org What is PEP? What PEP involves
possible side effects, can be found in the
from 2004. Until the BASHH guidelines (2)
and establish infection in the body.
following sexual exposure. It is believed
or, if it does, to what extent. There are
the least effective, frequently duotherapy
after occupational exposure despite being
times given to prevent infection following
exposure after sex or IV drug taking.
those taking PEP after sexual exposure (3)
How might it work?
established HIV infection may be adequate
infection but is given as PEP. This mirrors
detection in the blood. For PEP to prevent
during this ‘window of opportunity’. • Drugs prescribed.
delay in giving PEP the less likely it is to
• Length of time between exposure and start of PEP. • Levels of adherence to PEP. • Different types of exposure (occupational or a variety
ineffective if administered later than 24
of sexual exposures).
‘source’ of infection is often unknown.
PEP’s effectiveness follow-up HIV tests
offer PEP later than 24 to 48 hours. The research Does PEP work?
PEP in occupational settings from 2004 (1)
based on ‘biological plausibility’ - i.e.
it for babies born to infected women. The risk of HIV being passed on
exposure is not yet governed by nationally
conversions among those completing PEP.
clinicians follow at their discretion, not
reliable conclusions on PEP’s effectiveness.
effective (and to what degree) is based on:
• Biological plausibility
before the arrival of viral load-reducing
(what can be expected to occur
treatments, the likelihood of transmission
in the absence of firm data). • ‘Has the person presented soon • Existing cohort studies enough after exposure for PEP of people taking PEP. to work?’
viral load it is believed the likelihood of
• Studies of PEP in primates. • ‘Was the ‘source’ HIV positive?’ • Expert opinion.
If the ‘source’ is identified as HIV positive,
• Data on PEP from other settings (e.g. use with new-born babies of HIV-infected women). Side effects of PEP
‘source’s’ virus strain. If the ‘source’ is
uninfected, PEP is not given or is stopped. • Insertive and receptive vaginal sex (unless accompanied by trauma).
retroviral drugs for established infection. • Insertive anal sex.
status of the ‘source’ individual may
• Insertive or receptive oral sex.
However, factors such as viral load, skin
insufficient time to produce effects such
as heart disease, diabetes, liver problems
the level of risk involved in each sex act. • ‘Does the candidate for PEP have HIV already?’ • Receptive anal sex - PEP recommended.
lipodystrophy and serious liver damage. • Oral sex (including receptive or with ejaculation into the mouth) - PEP not recommended. • Insertive anal or insertive and receptive vaginal sex - somewhere
considered when assessing PEP eligibility;
between ‘recommended’ and ‘not recommended’. • Type of sex act and whether ‘insertive’ or ‘receptive’ (vaginal, anal, oral). • Whether ejaculation
protease inhibitors are used) discontinue
into the body occurred. • Whether physical trauma (e.g. bleeding) or violence (e.g. rape) Under what circumstances occurred.
of this. If the ‘source’ is of unknown
is PEP given? • Will the person be able to adhere to 28 days of anti-retroviral therapy and possible side effects?
only considered for receptive anal sex. • Will the person consent to HIV testing before PEP starts and for follow-up tests at 1, 3 and 6 months? How does someone get PEP?
Key factors remain how likely the ‘source’
that a ‘source’ is infected are low enough
to make PEP seem not cost effective. • ‘Yes’ 70.8% • ‘Maybe’ 27.2% • ‘No’ 2%
about PEP than those with low levels.
in the mainstream, gay and HIV press. • Finding a clinic/clinician within the necessary time period. • Knowing which clinics/clinicians are most likely to prescribe PEP. • Knowing risk factors that make a Will PEP use lead to clinician more likely to prescribe PEP. more drug resistant HIV?
If PEP is effective, the HIV entering the
Does PEP encourage
exists cannot become drug-resistant.
willingness to say those things (truthful
more sexual risk-taking?
PEP access increases sexual risk-taking.(9)
these drugs. But after PEP the anti-viral
more persuasive than ‘I had a casual sex
taking among those who have had PEP.
no ‘memory’ behind that would interfere
know.’ As with accessing health care in
Is PEP cost-effective?
interventions with potential for reducing
anti-retroviral treatment may also result
1) If the person given PEP already has HIV. PEP may not be sufficient Who knows about PEP? therapy to suppress viral reproduction, potentially allowing the virus to develop resistance to the drugs used in the PEP combination. 2) If PEP fails to prevent an infection. Then the virus has encountered the drugs, survived and may develop • 0.7% have tried to get PEP resistance. This is possible if someone • 0.4% report taking it does not complete the PEP course
rate the vast majority of those receiving
• 4.8% know someone who has or does not take PEP as instructed. received it. Alternately, if the strain of HIV entering the body is already resistant to any of the drugs in the PEP • 3.1% had tried to get it combination, PEP is more likely to • 2.1% report taking it fail and the person will be infected • 22.9% know someone who has with this drug-resistant strain. received it.
The new england journal of medicine g e n o m i c m e d i c i n e Alan E. Guttmacher, M.D., and Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., Editors Muin J. Khoury, M.D., Ph.D., Linda L. McCabe, Ph.D., hysicians in the era of genomic medicine will have the oppor-Prevention, Centers for Disease Control andtunity to move from intense, crisis-driven intervention to predictive medicine. Prevention, A
Land Use, Residential Density, and Walking The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis Daniel A. Rodríguez, PhD, Kelly R. Evenson, PhD, Ana V. Diez Roux, MD, PhD, Shannon J. Brines, MS Background: The neighborhood environment may play a role in encouraging sedentary patterns,especially for middle-aged and older adults. The aim of this study was to examine the associations between walking an