Abstract

IntroductionVaginal tenofovir (TFV) 1% gel may reduce incident HIV-1 and herpes simplex virus 2 infection. Pregnancy may increase risk of HIV acquisition, and incident HIV in pregnancy potentiates perinatal HIV transmission. Our objective was to investigate the safety and pharmacokinetics of seven days of TFV 1% vaginal gel in term and near-term pregnancy.MethodsNinety-eight healthy pregnant women, stratified to a term cohort followed by a near-term cohort, were enrolled into a 2:1 randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial. Women received TFV or placebo gel for seven consecutive days with pharmacokinetic sampling on days 0 and 6. Maternal and cord blood were collected at delivery. Primary end points included laboratory and genital adverse events, adverse pregnancy and neonatal outcomes, and maternal TFV levels.ResultsMost adverse events were grade 1 and none of the grade 3 or 4 adverse events were related to study product. There was no significant difference in safety end points between the two pregnancy cohorts (p=0.18); therefore, their data were combined. Primary safety end point rates were similar for mothers randomized to the TFV gel vs placebo arm (72.7 and 68.8%, p=0.81). The same was true for newborns in the TFV gel vs placebo arms (4.5% vs 6.3%, p=0.66). All women randomized to TFV had quantifiable serum levels within eight hours of dosing, with low overall median (interquartile range) day 0 and day 6 peak values (3.8 (2.0 to 7.0) and 5.8 (2.6 to 9.4) ng/mL, respectively).ConclusionsDaily TFV 1% vaginal gel use in term and near-term pregnancy appears to be safe and produces low serum drug levels.

Highlights

  • Vaginal tenofovir (TFV) 1% gel may reduce incident HIV-1 and herpes simplex virus 2 infection

  • The Follow-on African Consortium for Tenofovir Studies 001 study reported no effectiveness of TFV 1% gel for HIV prevention in women [9]

  • CAPRISA 004 noted a 55% reduction in incident herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2) infections among TFV gel recipients, and similar protection against incident HSV-2 was noted in the VOICE study [10,11]

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Summary

Introduction

Vaginal tenofovir (TFV) 1% gel may reduce incident HIV-1 and herpes simplex virus 2 infection. CAPRISA 004 noted a 55% reduction in incident herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2) infections among TFV gel recipients, and similar protection against incident HSV-2 was noted in the VOICE study [10,11]. Given these mixed data, the future of TFV gel for HIV prevention is currently unclear; other delivery systems are under study for topical delivery of intravaginal TFV

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