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Implications of Anal Intercourse and Rectal use of Products in Vaginal Microbicide Trials

Implications of Anal Intercourse and Rectal use of Products in Vaginal Microbicide Trials. Ian McGowan MD PhD FRCP. Overview. Epidemiology of anal intercourse – recent updates How might anal intercourse impact on the ability to conduct vaginal microbicide studies?

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Implications of Anal Intercourse and Rectal use of Products in Vaginal Microbicide Trials

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  1. Implications of Anal Intercourse and Rectal use of Products in Vaginal Microbicide Trials Ian McGowan MD PhD FRCP

  2. Overview • Epidemiology of anal intercourse – recent updates • How might anal intercourse impact on the ability to conduct vaginal microbicide studies? • Rectal use of vaginal products • How are we monitoring anal intercourse in MTN studies? • What else do we need to do?

  3. Epidemiology of Anal IntercourseRecent updates

  4. Heterosexual Anal Intercourse in the US

  5. EX-US Prevalence of Female RAI Brazil: Guimares MD et al. 1995, South Africa: Karim SS and Ramjee G 1998 Peru: Caceres C et al. 1997, Kenya: Schwandt M et al. 2006

  6. US HIV Incidence in MSM Sifakis F et al. JAIDS 2007

  7. HIV Prevalence Rates Among MSM in West Africa Baral, S. et al. A Systematic Review of HIV epidemiology and risk factors among MSM in Sub-Saharan Africa 2000-2008. International AIDS Conference, Mexico City, 2008

  8. HIV Prevalence Rates Among MSM in East Africa/ North Africa

  9. HIV Prevalence Rates Among MSM Southern Africa

  10. HIV Incidence Rates • African HIV incidence data is available only from Mombasa, Kenya • Among MSM who report: • Insertive sex only • 8.8 %/person-year • Receptive sex only • 12.9 % per person-year • Both receptive and insertive sex it is • 20.4 % per person years

  11. Rectal Use of Vaginal Products

  12. Rectal and Vaginal Mucosa Are Very Different • Histology • Immunology • Microbiology • Differential susceptibility to candidate microbicides

  13. How Might Anal Intercourse Impact on the Ability to Conduct Vaginal Microbicide Studies?

  14. Anal Intercourse in Vaginal Microbicide Trials • Vaginal microbicide trials are designed to test the hypothesis that use of a vaginal product would result in reduced HIV acquisition in a “high risk” population. • This assumes that HIV infection is acquired vaginally • But what if….

  15. HIV Acquisition Through Non-Vaginal Routes • Anal intercourse • Increasing epidemiological evidence that both men and women practice RAI in developed and developing world settings • RAI is 20-80 times more efficient that vaginal intercourse in acquiring HIV infection • Intravenous drug use • Not a major problem in Sub Saharan Africa but might be an issue in Eastern Europe

  16. Anal Intercourse in VM Trials • COL 1492 trial of nonoxynol-9: • Prior history of anal intercourse was reported to range from 41% among sex workers in Durban, South Africa to less than 5% in Thailand • 75% of women at the Durban site reporting RAI at some point during the trial.

  17. Modeling Impact of RAI in Vaginal Microbicide Studies • Mathematical model looking at the impact of RAI in vaginal microbicide trials • Definitions • Transmission probability of vaginal sex (TV) • Transmission probability of rectal sex (TR) • Apparent effectiveness of vaginal microbicide (EA) McGowan and Taylor 2009

  18. Impact of Rectal Sex on Power Transmission Probability 1X 10X 20X

  19. Dilution of Efficacy from Different Sources Benoît R. Mâsse, PhD

  20. How are We Monitoring Anal Intercourse in MTN Studies?

  21. Definitions • Multiple definitions of anal sex make cross study comparisons difficult • Potential definitions: • Ever had anal sex (prior to the study) • Anal sex during the study • Anal sex in since the last visit • Anal sex in the last “X” months • Data capture method also very important

  22. Use of ACASI to Monitor RAI

  23. Data on RAI Using ACASI *** p<.001; ** p<.01; * p<.05; † p<.10

  24. What Else do We Need to Do?

  25. Next Steps • Exclude participants from Phase 2B/3 vaginal microbicide trials with a history of RAI • Counsel participants not to practice RAI in vaginal microbicide trials • Conduct Phase 1 rectal safety trials of vaginal microbicides

  26. Evaluate the Rectal Safety of Vaginal Microbicides

  27. “For this reason, NIAID places a priority on developing HIV prevention tools that women can implement independently. One such method under study is a microbicide—a gel, cream or foam intended to prevent the sexual transmission of HIV when applied topically inside the vagina or rectum. Statement of Anthony S. Fauci, M.D.Director, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious DiseasesNational Institutes of Health on National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness DayMarch 10, 2009

  28. Microbicide Safety and Acceptability in Young Men • NICHD R01 • Pittsburgh, Boston, Puerto Rico • Phase 1 safety and acceptability of VivaGel™ • Ethnically diverse MSM (18-30) • Consensual RAI in last month • Unprotected RAI in last year NIH/NICHD/NIMH/R01 HD059533-01A1

  29. Rectal Specific Products • CHARM Program • Combination HIV Antiretroviral Microbicide Program • DAIDS IPCP Program • Consortium • University of Pittsburgh • UCLA • Johns Hopkins • UNC • CONRAD NIH/DAIDS/U19 AI082637

  30. Phase 2 Rectal Safety Study • Double blind placebo controlled • Population: • 300 RAI sexually active men and women with 6 month follow-up • Three study arms: • Oral tenofovir + placebo tenofovir gel • Placebo oral tenofovir + tenofovir gel • Oral tenofovir + tenofovir gel • Study endpoints • Safety • PK substudy • Explant efficacy substudy

  31. Summary • RAI has the potential to significantly impact the potential to identify a safe and effective vaginal microbicide • Participants in Phase 2B/3 vaginal microbicide trials need to be counseled about RAI • We need to continue to screen the rectal safety of vaginal microbicides • We need to move towards development of rectal specific and rectal/vaginal combination products

  32. Acknowledgements Funding provided by NIAID NICHD and NIMH, all of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

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