Podcast PX Pulse
What’s Next for the Dapivirine Ring
In March, initial results from the two open-label trials of the dapivirine vaginal ring (HOPE and DREAM) showed that adherence and efficacy improved over the earlier Phase III trials. Open-label studies, unlike Phase III studies, do not use a placebo, and all participants know they are using an intervention with evidence of a certain level of HIV protection. The ring is also advancing along the pathway to licensure. If approved, it will be the next major prevention option available since the US FDA approved oral PrEP in 2012.
The dapivirine vaginal ring is made of silicone and inserted in the vagina releases the antiretroviral drug, dapivirine, over the course of a month to protect against HIV.
In this episode of Px Pulse, Zeda Rosenberg of the International Partnerships for Microbicides, which developed the ring, explains the latest findings and spells out how, when, where and if the ring might become an available tool. A trial participant and community leader in Uganda, Ruth*, pulls back the curtain on the ups and downs of using the ring, and a Ugandan investigator with the REACH study, Carolyne Akello of the Makere University-Johns Hopkins University Research Collaboration, explains the importance of the this trial, the next step in testing the potential of this monthly vaginal ring for young women.
*Last name withheld for confidentiality.
Highlights
- Zeda Rosenberg explores what we learn from preliminary data from HOPE and DREAM (7:29)
- Zeda Rosenberg demystifies the regulatory process (6:00)
- Zeda Rosenberg lays out critical opportunities for advocacy (4:05)
- Carolyne Akello puts the REACH trial in perspective (6:16)
- Trial participant Ruth* from Uganda shares the ups and downs of using the ring (9:12)
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