After recording success amongst teenage girls in the US, plans are in
progress to test in Africa, a vaginal ring that prevents HIV infection.
The ring contains an antiretroviral drug called dapivirine and is used for a month at a time.
Dapivirine inhibits HIV’s reverse transcriptase enzyme, a protein vital to HIV’s ability to replicate and cause an infection.
Each
intravaginal ring contains one or more microbicides that are intended
to be delivered into the vaginal compartment at a high concentration and
to be directly absorbed by the cells and tissues.
The flexible ring, which sits on the cervix, is said to cut infection by 56 percent.
Its usage gives women the freedom to protect themselves without relying on men to wear condoms.
At
the end of a six-month trial to ascertain its effectiveness,
researchers found that 87 percent of ninety-six sexually active girls
who partook had detectable levels of the drug in their vagina.
The study investigators concluded that the ring is safe and acceptable to young women.
“HIV
doesn’t distinguish between a 16-year-old and an 18-year-old. Access to
safe and effective HIV prevention shouldn’t either, young women of all
ages deserve to be protected,” said Sharon Hillier, principal
investigator and vice chair of the department of obstetrics, gynecology
and reproductive sciences at the University of Pittsburgh School of
Medicine.
If the ring gets regulatory approval, it would be the first method of prevention exclusively for women.
The study was presented at the 9th International AIDS Society conference in Paris.
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