PrEP “Cycling”: The dance of oral PrEP

The landscape for PrEP is in the midst of transformation, with opportunities to understand and improve HIV prevention. With increasing numbers taking oral PrEP and new products on the horizon, such as the Dapivirine Vaginal Ring and long-acting cabotegravir, the world must get rollout right. There are vital lessons to learn from how people use oral PrEP and critical questions to answer. AVACer Jeanne Baron’s blog, PrEP “Cycling”: The dance of oral PrEP explores one key lesson from today’s PrEP-users that could mean a new definition of success with PrEP.

And be sure to check two recent reports from AVAC’s Prevention Market Manager (PMM) project and Jhpiego, Evaluating, Scaling up and Enhancing Strategies for Supporting PrEP Continuation and Effective Use and Defining and Measuring the Effective Use of PrEP which offer key recommendations for this evolving field.

PrEP “Cycling”: The dance of oral PrEP

By Jeanne Baron

Oral PrEP, a daily pill first approved by the FDA in 2012, has changed a lot of things for the better for Josephine Aseme. At the start of 2021, more than a million people had at least started PrEP at some point since 2016—it’s movement in the right direction, but still shockingly short of the global target to reach at least three million people in that time-frame. Still there’s no question, it’s an essential HIV prevention option for Josephine and for many of the 12,000 women in the organization she founded in 2015 for women at risk, the Nigeria-based Greater Women Initiative for Health and Rights.

As a leader for sex workers’ rights, an advocate for poor and vulnerable woman, an AVAC Fellow and a sex worker herself, Josephine says she began taking PrEP in 2017 and quickly understood this pill would change her life. “PrEP really made a big impact for me. Clients cannot be trusted; they will deliberately misuse condoms, and I may not notice or be able to stop them. I was always scared of HIV. PrEP came along and empowered me to know that I can stay [HIV] negative.” So why is it that many PrEP users, including Josephine, sometimes “cycle off” PrEP, at least for a time? Understanding this question is imperative.

PrEP only works if you take it. For years, public health messaging, programs, services and data collection have attempted to reflect this fact of biology. A person has to have a certain level of drug in their body to be protected. This means that missed doses and missed appointments for refills, days and weeks not taking the preventive medication, represent a challenge, if not a serious problem. This in turn has led many to consider the discontinuation of PrEP as a potential failure; of programs and policies, of leadership and decision-makers, or even of users.

But the conversation is changing and stories from PrEP champions like Josephine, as well as data from studies, are leading the way. Josephine has counseled countless women on the potential benefits, risks and use of PrEP, and she herself has dropped her daily pill for periods of time only to later pick it up again.

A growing body of research about what’s behind this “cycling” points to a cross current of pressures. Many have been documented and are clearly barriers to PrEP use: side effects, stock-outs, fear of disclosure to partners and family, stigma and access issues, among others. But some people consciously choose to stop taking their pills, keen to give their bodies a rest from daily medication as they enter a period of their lives when HIV’s shadow is not so long.

While programs must have the resources to deliver PrEP to everyone who can benefit from it, a conversation with Josephine Aseme suggests there’s much to learn and understand about these patterns of use, and how policies and programs can support people to take PrEP when they need it.

Josephine has stopped taking her daily pill several times in the last five years. Once when traveling, she forgot her pills and found herself in a region where there was no access to PrEP. “I was away for a week and I reached out to other KPs [key populations eligible for PrEP] to see if I could get pills. It was sad. There was no PrEP there.”

At least twice she confronted stockouts after traveling hours to her regular “One-Stop-Shop” that offers stigma-free services for key populations. The month she visited her family she wasn’t working and dropped the pill while there. And during the terrifying month of March 2020, when COVID-19 shut down everything, she stopped taking PrEP.

And then there was the time she just got fed up. “I’d been on PrEP a long time. I was saying to myself ‘I’m tired.’ Some part of me was thinking, ‘enough of this medication has been in my system. I’m going off for two or three months.’ But at the same time, I was still doing sex work and I was still scared of HIV.”

Eventually that anxiety drove Josephine back to PrEP and she has not cycled off since May 2020. She says her experience with going on and off PrEP is typical. One of her own staff, another PrEP champion and a sex worker, went off PrEP for a time. “When I learned about it and asked her why, it was clear she understood the consequences. But I wasn’t surprised because I have gone through the same stage. She was just tired of taking a pill. She’s back on it now.” And why did she go back on it? Josephine offers insight into this.

In one of her programs at Greater Women Initiative for Health and Rights, Josephine offers support to sex workers at hot spots where they meet clients. Her conversations from this outreach put a spotlight on the struggle to stay HIV negative, and the pressures, fears and opportunities that spur a return to PrEP.

Josephine goes to the hot spots to share prevention messages, and remind people that they can stay negative. “I’ll see people I have helped to get PrEP, or provided referrals to PrEP, and they’ll tell me ‘sorry, my pill finished months ago, but now I feel like I need to go back to the pill’. Josephine says brothel owners will send them packing if they become positive. Most of the brothel owners encourage regular and mandatory HIV testing. “That fear will bring others back on track with PrEP. Maybe someone they know has just become positive. Sometimes my phone will ring with someone saying ‘I just remembered to call you today, please where can I get PrEP. I am in a new location now, where I can find it.’ We see this a lot in our program.”

The SEARCH study, conducted among the population of 16 communities in rural Kenya and Uganda since 2013, has provided telling data on these patterns. Still ongoing, SEARCH studied interventions to bring down the incidence of HIV, including rapid access to PrEP with counseling, and flexible options for follow-up, among other things. Among the key findings: 83 percent of study participants stopped PrEP at least once (half of them later restarted). Among those who initiated PrEP, incidence went down 74 percent (compared to control groups that were not offered this enriched program for PrEP) even though self-reported adherence among the whole cohort was never better than 42 percent and declined to 27 percent by week 60. The explanation may be that those who self-reported being at risk showed much higher adherence, never lower than 70 percent.

These data along with data from the US, the UK and Australia, among other high-income settings, suggest “coverage”—getting enough PrEP to the people who need it—can result in lower incidence across a population of PrEP users, even if many people are cycling on and off. It’s a picture that demands more nuance in how the field defines using PrEP effectively.

Two recent reports from AVAC’s Prevention Market Manager (PMM) project and Jhpiego, Evaluating, Scaling up and Enhancing Strategies for Supporting PrEP Continuation and Effective Use and Defining and Measuring the Effective Use of PrEP offer key recommendations to address these complex issues: the field should develop new definitions and metrics for effective PrEP use that anticipate that people will cycle on and off; a new focus on the impact of all PrEP products on reducing HIV incidence is needed; and more research must be done to understand the range of reasons people discontinue and return to PrEP.

Supporting people during seasons of risk to stay on PrEP will be relevant to the next generation of prevention products, including the Dapivirine Vaginal Ring (DVR) and injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA), both approved by regulatory bodies and moving toward introduction, as well as the PrEP strategies still being tested, such as the islatravir monthly pill and injectable lenacapavir.

Even though these methods are longer-acting than daily oral PrEP, they each come with challenges. People will also start and stop or switch products. Exactly why and when, and how they find their way back to prevention must be better understood. Reaching women in remote villages in languages they understand must be part of the plan. And all this knowledge must be applied to programs and policies that should soon be offering an increasing number of options. Will those options be integrated into services that result in meaningful choices for Josephine Aseme and the women she works with? Josephine says she certainly hopes so, because sticking with daily oral PrEP has been hard, a life-saving yoke that sits heavily.

As a panelist at a recent prevention conference Josephine said a lot of the information wasn’t new, but she got excited when someone said PrEP is not a lifetime pill. “I really liked hearing this; the idea that I don’t have to be on PrEP forever. I am grateful for PrEP having my back all these years, for protecting me. But I am not happy taking it every day. I want to be able to choose other methods to protect myself. Every time I counsel someone who is initiating PrEP they ask me ‘how long do I have to be on it’ and it’s so good to say, ‘it’s not a lifetime pill. When you are still at risk, take the pill. When the risk stops, so does the pill.’”

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Other publications coming from the PMM explore related topics in-depth: Lessons from Oral PrEP Programs and Their Implications for Next Generation Prevention, to be published shortly, draws lessons from the introduction of PrEP in terms of demand creation, the design of delivery, assessing impact and more. And a series of highly-focused briefs, also to be published in the weeks to come, will dive into key technical recommendations. Watch out for these!

40 years of HIV/AIDS, and 18 months of COVID: Resources and Perspectives

It’s 18 months and counting since COVID-19 hit the world, and it’s 40 years this week since the first cases of HIV appeared in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report of the CDC. Both epidemics have deeply scarred humankind, and neither can be vanquished without prevention. That message is vital to remember as the UN High Level Meeting (HLM) on AIDS begins next week—20 years since the first UN General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS that led to the establishment of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

At AVAC.org we have new resources to support your advocacy and get you the latest information on the prevention pipelines for both HIV and COVID-19—and some recommended reading, too, from some friends and colleagues:

We hope you’ll scroll down for a roundup of recently updated materials. And we hope you’ll join a side meeting at the HLM, No Prevention, No End: The importance of leadership for HIV prevention—How decisions can turn an epidemic. Register to support the urgent need for leadership to reach the 2030 UN targets. And to see the larger conversation of the HLM, and AVAC’s take, on Twitter, follow #HLM2021AIDS.

The HIV Prevention Pipeline

  • AVAC’s classic infographic, The Future of ARV-Based Prevention and More, has a fresh update. It offers a look at the range of non-vaccine technology moving from pre-clinical through phase IV trials.
  • HIV Vaccine Awareness Day on May 18th brought a slew of resources for vaccine advocacy. On AVAC’s dedicated page for HVAD 2021 you will find key messages, a PowerPoint for basic vaccine science, podcasts, opinion pieces and more.
  • You won’t want to miss the June 29th webinar, What’s Your Pleasure? Expanding Your Choices on the HIV Prevention Buffet. The talk will be both a scientific update on the research pipeline—with Dr. Linda-Gail Bekker from the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation, Dazon Dixon Diallo from SisterLove, and Rob Newells from the Black AIDS Institute—and a happenin’ gathering with spoken word artist Storie Deveraux and DJ set by DJ Triple D. Register here.

Updates On COVID Vaccines

HIV Vaccines: The basics

This introductory PowerPoint slide set reviews basic concepts, and provides an overview of research status and recent developments.

New Resources on AVAC.org and PrEPWatch

In this round-up of new AVAC resources you’ll find a wide range of new resources:

Understanding the Latest in HIV Prevention Research

HIV Vaccine Awareness Day is just around the corner—May 18th! In preparation, AVAC hosted a webinar, HIV Vaccines in the Midst of COVID, on Thursday, May 13.

An Advocates’ Primer on Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for PrEP: In 2020, two large-scale efficacy trials, HPTN 083 & 084, found that a long-acting injectable form of cabotegravir as PrEP provided high levels of protection among people at risk of HIV. That’s truly exciting. There’s also a lot to learn and understand about next steps. What do the trial results explain, what still needs to be explored, and what do advocates think needs to happen next? Check out our primer for what’s known and what’s next for this emerging biomedical HIV prevention strategy.

A webinar: Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for PrEP – Understanding the results and key areas for advocacy: AVAC’s May 3rd webinar on CAB-LA featured the researchers who led the studies on long-acting injectable PrEP, and advocates who are defining key issues for the introduction of CAB-LA.

Dive into the AMP Trials: In this episode of Px Pulse, AVACers Jeanne Baron and Daisy Ouya talk to leading bNAb researcher, IAVI’s Devin Sok; veteran HIV research advocate Mark Hubbard who served on AMP’s protocol team; and a senior member of the HVTN’s community engagement team, a chief explainer of the AMP trails, Gail Broder. Together they explore why these findings point to the need for combination antibodies, the need for a better understanding of the types of HIV that are circulating in a community, the complicated implications of a key lab test, the TZM-bl assay, and more.

Developments in the HIV Prevention Pipeline: PrEP, vaccines and more: Created by AVAC, EATG, PrEP in Europe, and PrEPster, this slide deck and recorded webinar offers community educators and advocates a concise summary of existing and future PrEP products, and a community-level perspective on strategic advocacy for PrEP access and uptake.

Watchdogging PEPFAR

PEPFAR Watch is a new online resource from a collaboration working to hold PEPFAR accountable to communities. The website features reports, news, and resources to support community-led monitoring, a core initiative for accountability in PEPFAR programs. You can also sign up to become members and gain access to webinars, PEPFAR quarterly data and more. The collaboration includes Health GAP, AVAC, TAG, the O’Neill Institute, MPact, the PLUS Coalition, amfAR, and CHANGE. It should be a one stop shop for all the information you need to monitor and influence PEPFAR Country Operational Plans. Find other supportive resources on AVAC’s page: Advocate for Access to High-Impact Prevention.

A Spotlight on Equity and Ethics

Make Your Voice Heard: Towards advancing racial equity & diversity in biomedical research: In response to a call from the NIH for proposals to advance racial equity, diversity, and inclusion within all facets of the biomedical research workforce, and expand research to eliminate or lessen health disparities and inequities, AVAC’s John Meade authored a blog on the major recommendations offered to the NIH from a coalition of 25 HIV research advocate organization.

How can research ethics committees help to strengthen stakeholder engagement in health research in South Africa? An evaluation of REC documents: This article, co-authored by our CASPR partners at South Africa’s HIV AIDS Vaccines Ethics Group (HAVEG) and AVAC’s Jess Salzwedel, and published in the South African Journal of Bioethics and Law, recommends research ethics committees (RECs) step up the focus on stakeholder engagement. Researchers working with REC’s should plan for robust stakeholder engagement and REC documentation should be harmonized to reflect this priority.

Advocacy for Vaccine Access

Breaking the Bottlenecks to COVID-19 Vaccine Access: Ensuring global access to COVID vaccines—and any health commodity—requires a multi-pronged effort to get the right policies in place. This new infographic identifies the multiple factors that contribute to bottlenecks in the global supply of #COVID19 vaccines and how to address them.

We hope these resources, which cut across issues facing the field, will empower your advocacy where change is both crucial and possible.

Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for PrEP: Understanding Results of HPTN 083 & 084 and key areas for advocacy

Join AVAC and partners for webinar on May 3 webinar, 10-11:30am EDT where you can engage with researchers who led the studies about this injectable PrEP strategy and advocates who are leading essential advocacy efforts around the introduction of CAB-LA. On the call, lead trial investigators Sinead Delany-Moretlwe from HPTN 084 and Raphy Landovitz from HPTN 083 will provide updates, and we’ll be joined by AVAC’s Emily Bass, Chiluyfa Kasanda from TALC in Zambia, Richard Lusimbo from Pan Africa ILGA, and Sibongile Maseko who is an independent consultant and women’s health advocate based in Eswatini. Register here.

Moving Ahead with Long-Acting PrEP: Webinar and updated resource on CAB-LA research and advocacy

Long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA) for PrEP is causing buzz and raising opportunities and questions for prevention advocates. Whether you’ve got questions or want to know what the buzz is about, AVAC has you covered.

We’ve updated our comprehensive primer on CAB-LA: Advocates’ Primer on Long-Acting Injectable Cabotegravir for PrEP: Understanding the Initial Results of HPTN 083 and HPTN 084, and held a May 3 webinar, 10-11:30am EDT where you can listen to the researchers who led the studies about this injectable PrEP strategy and advocates who are leading essential advocacy efforts around the introduction of CAB-LA.

On the call, lead trial investigators Sinead Delany-Moretlwe from HPTN 084 and Raphy Landovitz from HPTN 083 provided updates, and we were joined by AVAC’s Emily Bass, Chiluyfa Kasanda from TALC in Zambia, Richard Lusimbo from Pan Africa ILGA, and Sibongile Maseko who is an independent consultant and women’s health advocate based in Eswatini.

Watch the recording and find the slides here.

As our new primer describes, CAB-LA injections every eight weeks provided high levels of protection against HIV in cisgender women, cisgender men who have sex with men and transgender women who have sex with men. That’s truly exciting. There’s also a lot to learn and understand about next steps. A small number of people who received on-time injections and went on to acquire HIV did not test “HIV-positive” on standard antibody-based HIV tests. An even smaller number acquired resistance to integrase inhibitors—the class that includes cabotegravir and dolutegravir. In addition to these crucial issues, it’s also important to focus on questions of access. For those who want an injectable PrEP strategy, CAB-LA needs to be accessible and affordable.

What do the trial results explain, what still needs to be explored, and what do advocates think needs to happen next? Check out the updated resource and register the webinar to engage with it all!

New Resources on AVAC.org

AVAC has several new resources covering a gamut of cutting-edge issues for the field. An up-close look at the science covered at CROI; a handy snapshot of multipurpose technology (MPTs) moving through the research pipeline; a new infographic on “time to market” for HIV prevention products furthest along in development; and a special publication of Good Participatory Practice fitted to address COVID-19 trials. Read on for details and links for these timely resources.

Time to Market Infographic

Years Ahead in HIV Prevention Research: Time to Market – The latest addition to our extensive infographic library is this new timeline showing the potential time points when the next-generation of HIV prevention options might find their way into new programs. This new graphic complements the HIV Px Research, Development and Implementation pipeline snapshot and The Years Ahead in Biomedical HIV Px Research trials timeline.

MPTs Making Headway

Advocates’ Guide to Multipurpose Prevention Technologies – Check out this guide to learn about four areas ripe for advocate involvement and get a snapshot on the status of MPT research and development, and data on investments.

Good Participatory Practice in the Age of COVID-19

Essential Principles & Practices for GPP Compliance: Engaging stakeholders in biomedical research during the era of COVID-19 – This guide to support stakeholder engagement in COVID-19 research is built from the Good Participatory Practice Guidelines for Biomedical HIV Prevention Trials (GPP). This new document responds to needs expressed by both researchers and advocates as COVID-19 research progresses with unprecedented speed and urgency. To mark the launch of this new document, AVAC hosted a webinar earlier today, which included diverse perspectives on the importance of GPP within COVID-research and beyond. Watch the recording here.

CROI in Focus

The Personal is Planetary: CROI and COVID one year on – This blog by AVAC’s Emily Bass gives context and perspective on the science and advocacy that defined the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in 2021. From a call for vaccine equity to a deep dive into the findings on cabotegravir as long-acting injectable PrEP, read Bass’s blog for a picture on where the science and advocacy is moving.

We are also happy to report that, in response to community requests, CROI organizers have agreed to make all recorded content from the meeting available on April 15—five months earlier than initially planned. And, if you missed it, check out the recordings from the Daily Research Updates for advocates on AVAC’s special CROI page.

New Resource! Advocates’ Guide to Multipurpose Prevention Technologies

AVAC has a new resource to support advocacy for multipurpose prevention technologies (MPTs), Advocates’ Guide to Multipurpose Prevention Technologies. The Guide calls out four areas ripe for advocate involvement. It also provides a snapshot on the status of MPT research and development and data on investments—critical information that can support evidence-based advocacy.

MPTs are products designed to simultaneously address more than one sexual and reproductive health (SRH) concern. Male and female condoms—which protect against pregnancy as well as HIV and other STIs—are the only MPTs available today. MPTs offer great promise for meeting people’s diverse and changing SRH needs. But advocacy for these emerging technologies is crucial to mobilize resources and broaden support through all stages of MPT R&D to ensure equitable access to products as they become available.

This new resource complements AVAC’s ongoing work to advance the integration of services for sexual and reproductive health (SRH) with HIV treatment and prevention. For the latest on the Dual Prevention Pill (DPP)—the next MPT that is likely to go to market soonest—visit its dedicated page on PrEPWatch.

AVAC is also supporting a pioneering initiative led by the Ministry of Health in Kenya, jointly run by NASCOP and the Department of Family Health, to work with implementing partners, county-level officials, advocates and other stakeholders, to integrate HIV prevention and SRH policies and services. Check out the assessment that preceded this important work in Kenya and a similar assessment with partners in Zimbabwe. Watch this space for progress as it develops, and bookmark www.srhintegration.org and www.avac.org/advance-hiv-srh-integration for an overview of the issues and key resources.

The Personal is Planetary: CROI and COVID one year on

Emily Bass is AVAC’s Director of Strategy & Content.

Last week, CROI went virtual as the world marked a year since the World Health Organization officially declared COVID-19 a global pandemic. Like everyone else, I had my own personal milestones from that week last year. I remember a dear friend who’d traveled from Uganda for CROI 2020 sitting in my living room, worrying about whether to attend the event before it pivoted to virtual at the last minute. I remember her deciding to leave and embracing her—unmasked—on the sidewalk in front of my house when she did. I do not have any idea now when we will see each other again.

A pandemic happens to a planet, but it is measured in individuals. Holding both of those realities at the same time is the challenge, and at this year’s CROI, no one did it better than Fatima Hassan and Gregg Gonsalves who shared a screen and billing, as joint presenters of the esteemed Martin Delaney Lecture. The pair delivered it not as a lecture but a conversation, thinking aloud about pernicious manifestations of vaccine nationalism and the inadequacy of current purchasing arrangements to circumvent a level of medical apartheid in vaccine distribution not seen since the era in which they fought for universal access to antiretrovirals. The conversation was simultaneously intimate and impassioned, which may have been why a comment Hassan made in passing nearly moved me to tears. She said she didn’t expect to see Gregg, a friend for two decades, “for years.”

Hassan and Gonsalves said many critical things in their talk—which CROI has made available (in response to community requests, CROI changed its original policy to keep all 2021 content behind a paywall for six months—all recorded content will now be available on April 15). Their clear, methodical and damning conversation tied today’s pandemic to the early years of HIV/AIDS. Gonsalves quoted irascible, irreplaceable AIDS activist Larry Kramer who said that HIV/AIDS was about “disposable people“, the Black, brown, queer, immigrant and poor people who are not valued by the capitalist state. “Now we see [with COVID] another set of disposable people,” Gonsalves said. “Many of us didn’t think we would have to see this again.”

Immediately after their talk, a working group came together to draft and launch a Call for Vaccine Equity and it was subsequently published in BMJ. It outlined a set of demands including a call for the United States government to incentivize pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson to share knowledge on how to produce their vaccines; World Trade Organization members to waive the trade-related intellectual property (TRIPS) provisions that serve as a barrier to generic production; and COVAX partners to acknowledge that its anticipated vaccine coverage rates of 20 percent of the population of countries dependent on COVAX facilities is simply too low. The cost of inaction will be measured in numbers that sometimes make the mind go numb; it will also be measured in the time that comrades spend separated by continents but bound in the common fight for equity.

This is not a test: Time to tackle HIV diagnostics, counseling messages, pricing and more for PrEP in its many forms

CROI brought new information on long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA) for PrEP, which has previously shown high levels of efficacy in reducing risk of HIV in gay men and other men who have sex with men and transgender people who have sex with men in a trial called HPTN 083; and in cisgender women, in a trial called HPTN 084.

Building on data presented at AIDS 2020, Dr. Raphy Landovitz presented an in-depth analysis of the timing of HIV infection in HPTN 083 participants, relative to when they were diagnosed with HIV, what product they were receiving, and how much of the drug was present in their blood.

A highly-detailed summary of the findings can be found here, in Gus Cairns’ always-excellent coverage for aidsmap. Broadly speaking, there are three key findings that advocates will need to react to and act on as part of a comprehensive PrEP agenda:

1. In people using injectable CAB-LA and daily oral TDF/FTC PrEP, standard HIV tests do not always provide accurate, real-time results. Most HIV tests look for antibodies to the virus and/or antigen (a molecule found on the surface of the virus) from HIV. People who have very low levels of HIV, or who have acquired HIV very recently, do not always have antibodies to the virus—and so they will test “negative” on standard diagnostics. Taking an antiretroviral like CAB-LA can suppress HIV to very low levels for a time, meaning that people who acquire HIV while receiving the injection may not test positive on standard diagnostics.

This was the case for four participants in HPTN 083 who acquired HIV even though they had received shots of CAB-LA as scheduled. These individuals did, eventually, test positive on the standard HIV antibody and antigen tests used at study visits, but when the trial team looked back at blood samples from these four people at prior visits, and used more sensitive laboratory diagnostics, they found that each had acquired HIV weeks, if not months, prior to the first positive test result at the site. Landovitz said there is “a need to look [for HIV] with diagnostics that are appropriately sensitive. And with long-acting agents for prevention [e.g., cabotegravir], currently available diagnostics are blunted or delayed in sensitivity.”

A presentation by Dr. Donn Colby looking at people using daily oral PrEP in Thailand also found eight individuals who had HIV at the time that they initiated oral PrEP but tested negative on standard HIV tests at enrollment. Five of these individuals tested were identified via a pooled RNA test (a group of samples tested for signs of HIV genetic material, which is detectable earlier after infection than antigen or antibody). Three individuals tested positive after starting PrEP. As in HPTN 083, the site went back to look at previously collected samples and found viral RNA when an array of standard tests gave a “negative” result.

The number of people with HIV whose virus isn’t picked up via standard tests is relatively small. Colby estimated about one case of acute infection (the term for the very early phase after HIV acquisition) per 400 people initiating PrEP at the Thai PrEP clinic; in HPTN 083, the four individuals with HIV at baseline (described above) were out of a group of 2,282—which is one per 570.

But even with these small numbers, there are big questions: how should the risk of a false negative be conveyed to people when they start a PrEP strategy like CAB-LA where it appears that there can be a long interval between infection and diagnosis via antibody/antigen tests? What approaches can be used in programs when a person is starting PrEP initiation? Finding people with acute HIV infection allows them to start treatment right away if they choose to do so. It also minimizes the risk that a person with HIV will start single-drug PrEP, which can lead to drug resistance.

Both of the solutions shared at CROI are practical in some ways and present challenges in other ways. In the Thai clinic, people who report a behavior in the past month that is associated with high risk of HIV are initiated on three-drug ART for the first month of PrEP, before a confirmatory negative test allows them to shift from three-drug ART to a single drug for PrEP. Both Colby and Landovitz talked about the need to consider using viral load assays to confirm HIV status. These tests, used to detect HIV in the blood of people living with the virus, are far more sensitive than diagnostics; they’re also far more expensive. Hearing this suggestion, in the context of ongoing gaps in coverage of viral load testing for people living with HIV, immediately made me think of the conversation around oral PrEP in the years following the first evidence of its efficacy. Then, treatment waitlists and shortages of TDF/FTC for people living with HIV made a push for expanded rollout of TDF/FTC for prevention untenable for many activists. Calls to introduce viral load testing as a diagnostic for either CAB-LA, oral PrEP or the Dapivirine Vaginal Ring must happen in the context of a concerted, funded effort to provide universal viral load coverage—at least one viral load test per year—to all people living with HIV. This is by no means a given.

CROI itself featured presentations on approaches that could provide cheap, early alternatives to viral load tests as means of determining when a person’s current HIV drug combination is no longer suppressing her virus. (A detectable viral load is used as a sign of “treatment failure.”) Dr. Jose Castillo-Mancilla presented on the use of dried blood spot tests to detect emtricitabine triphosphate. This form of TDF/FTC is only detectable in the blood within 36 hours after a person has taken a pill; testing for presence or absence is a way of finding out whether a person has recently missed a dose. Castillo-Mancilla and his colleagues found that people with no detectable emtricitabine triphosphate were more likely to have detectable viral loads in the future. Dr. Jacantha Odayar and her colleagues in a South Africa study found that presence or absence of tenofovir diphosphate (another form TDF/FTC takes as it is broken down, or metabolized, in the body) in blood predicted future viremia in pregnant women. Such tests, which focus on TDF/FTC containing regimens, could be used as a “early warning” system for predicting virologic failure among people living with HIV.

2. Counseling needs to catch up to high-tech PrEP. Landovitz’s presentation also suggested that rolling out CAB-LA for PrEP will require counseling strategies for people who test positive while receiving the injections as prescribed. In HPTN 083, one of the people who acquired HIV, despite on-time injections, initially refused to accept the diagnosis in part because standard test results were inconclusive. This individual opted for a month of post-exposure prophylaxis instead of starting treatment. Delays in diagnosis, confounding results on standard diagnostics and individual disbelief in positive test results will all come up in “real-world” use. Counseling and follow-up must be developed with these needs in mind.

A presentation by Dr. Catherine Koss from the SEARCH study offered another reminder that social networks play a key role in PrEP use. The study made a valuable investment in looking at both community, social and structural aspects impacting health behaviors. SEARCH used an elaborate system of contact mapping and concluded that people who knew someone using PrEP were 57 percent more likely to use PrEP themselves. Destigmatizing and normalizing PrEP so that people talk about it when they choose to use it (or stop or restart it), and incorporating peer-to-peer support for all forms of PrEP into programs will likely be key.

Resistance happens among people taking CAB-LA but not necessarily during the “tail”. Long-acting products like CAB-LA include a period, after a person has stopped receiving injections, when the drug is still in the body but at levels that don’t provide protection against infection—often referred to as the “tail”. (For any PrEP strategy, there’s a blood-drug level that’s associated with prevention; you don’t need “some” PrEP drug but “enough” to reduce HIV risk.) There’s been real concern about drug resistance arising in people who acquire HIV during the tail. But in the three people who fell into this category in HPTN 083, none had HIV with genetic mutations that render it resistant to integrase inhibitors, the class of drug that includes cabotegravir. This number is too small to support conclusions about the risk of resistance, but in this handful of people, resistance didn’t emerge during the tail. When integrase inhibitor resistance did emerge in HPTN 083 participants, it was in people who were infected and also receiving the injections: one of the people who had HIV at the time of enrollment developed resistance, as did two people who acquired HIV during the oral lead-in phase (a trial period where individuals took the pill form of CAB-LA before receiving the injection, to ensure that the drug was well-tolerated). Two people who acquired HIV while receiving CAB-LA injections also developed integrase inhibitor resistance; two others had so little virus in their blood that the team could not get a resistance test. The take-home message—at least from this trial—is that the risk of resistance is greater when people acquire HIV while taking CAB-LA as prescribed than it is in people who’ve stopped receiving the injection, i.e., in the context of the “tail”. Cabotegravir is an integrase inhibitor, as is dolutegravir (DTG), which is used as first-line treatment in many settings. The people with integrase-inhibitor-resistant virus responded to alternative regimens, including TDF/FTC-efavirenz-based therapy and a regimen using a boosted protease inhibitor. In resource-constrained settings where countries have fully embraced DTG-based first-line therapy, it will be essential to plan for CAB-LA introduction in the context of treatment options for those with integrase inhibitor-resistance.

3. Injectable PrEP is “superior” to oral PrEP among people who can’t or don’t adhere to the daily pill. Landovitz also presented an analysis of serum and dried blood spot samples from HPTN 083 participants who were assigned to receive daily oral TDF/FTC, the comparison arm of the study. (In each arm, people also received a dummy, or “inert” version of the other product—people randomized to TDF/FTC received saline injections, people receiving CAB-LA injections received dummy pills.) Thirty-seven of the 39 individuals who were prescribed and counseled on the active daily pill and went on to acquire HIV had “suboptimal or non-adherent” levels of the drug in their samples at the time of infection. The study concluded that CAB-LA was “superior” to oral TDF/FTC. These new data clarify that people who received CAB-LA injections on schedule every two months had a substantially lower risk of HIV than people who received daily oral PrEP but did not or were not able to take it as prescribed. In other words, the difference in incidence rates relates to product use, and not the product itself.

One strategy is not inherently superior to the other, i.e., injections and daily oral PrEP each taken exactly as prescribed may well provide comparable levels of protection; the study didn’t evaluate this question.

Products exist in the real world, where people’s lives, circumstances, bodies and preferences play a role in what’s possible and pleasurable. In the real world—as several CROI presentations highlighted—starting and staying on daily oral PrEP is a challenge for some. The 083 data say much the same. “Choice is the answer,” declared the inimitable Dr. Linda-Gail Bekker in her plenary presentation, emphasizing that many oral PrEP programs see people using the strategy with complex patterns of starting and re-initiation. Understanding these patterns of use—and their impact on both individual risk and population incidence—is key to understanding the impact of PrEP.

Time to calculate the cost of progress—and of inaction

CROI also brought updates from product developers working on other types of long-acting PrEP, including a one-year implant containing the drug islatravir that could be placed under the skin for continuous protection, and a Dapivirine Vaginal Ring (DVR) that could be worn for three months. This is three times as long as a monthly ring that has received a favorable opinion from the European Medicines Agency and been recommended by the WHO. The International Partnership for Microbicides is presently submitting the monthly DVR for regulatory approval in a range of countries.

Islatravir (both as an annual implant and as a monthly pill, which is now in efficacy trials), a three-month ring and the six-monthly injectable lenacapavir look promising and would make choice-based programming real by expanding options and allowing prevention programs to meet people where they are. Long-acting PrEP might, for example, play a role in HIV prevention for postpartum or breastfeeding women. A study of PrEP use among pregnant and breastfeeding women found higher PrEP uptake among pregnant women compared to those who were not pregnant, and a drop-off in PrEP use during breastfeeding. But risk remains high for HIV-negative women who are breastfeeding—a reminder that matching prevention offerings with lifecycle events is a life-saving imperative.

All of these offerings will come at a cost, of course. A “superior” strategy like CAB-LA could reduce HIV in many people, but could also require new testing tools and counseling strategies—and still won’t work for everyone, including transgender individuals with buttock implants, unless an alternate injection site can be identified. A 90-day ring and a one-year implant will, similarly, offer transformative options for reducing HIV risk, but will not address rates of STIs that remain very high in many study populations. Transformative PrEP programs will be ones that offer choice in both HIV and contraceptive options, and sexual and reproductive health care, including STI prevention and treatment, for people of all gender identities and sexual orientations. It’s not possible to plan or budget for such programs without knowing the cost of the products themselves. To date, ViiV, the developer of CAB-LA, has not set a price for CAB-LA. A modeling study presented by Dr. Anne Neilan asked the question, “How much should we be willing to pay for CAB-LA for MSM and transgender women, compared to generic daily oral TDF/FTC, or branded FTC/TAF.” Using a set of prices specific to the Global North, Neilan and her colleagues proposed that the injection would need to be priced comparably to generic daily oral PrEP for it to be considered “cost effective”.

While such models and projections always have limitations, they provoke useful and necessary discussions. Will the price be set according to this calculation? If it is not, will gaps in PrEP access open as they once did with antiretrovirals for HIV, and as they have for COVID-19 vaccines? Or will the HIV field, in all its diversity, set an example for how to learn from history and advance equity for the future?

At the end of CROI, I was no more certain of this than when I might see my Ugandan friend again—or when Hassan and Gonsalves might next sit side by side in real life. But I did know, in my bones, that if there was progress towards equity and justice it would come from the human connections between activists, allies and friends that have always transcended physical distance out of love and anger, and a commitment to lasting change.

The Personal is Planetary: CROI and COVID one year on

Last week the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) took place online—as the conference went virtual for the second year in a row. There are a number of excellent sources of news to catch all that was shared at the meeting including coverage from aidsmap, HIV-iBase and NATAP. And for recordings of the daily advocate/researcher breakfast updates (or margarita, depending on your time zone or personal preferences) are available at www.avac.org/croi2021. And, of course, there’s AVAC’s take on the news from CROI in a new blog post below. Enjoy!

The Personal is Planetary: CROI and COVID one year on

By Emily Bass

________________________________________

Last week, CROI went virtual as the world marked a year since the World Health Organization officially declared COVID-19 a global pandemic. Like everyone else, I had my own personal milestones from that week last year. I remember a dear friend who’d traveled from Uganda for CROI 2020 sitting in my living room, worrying about whether to attend the event before it pivoted to virtual at the last minute. I remember her deciding to leave and embracing her—unmasked—on the sidewalk in front of my house when she did. I do not have any idea now when we will see each other again.

A pandemic happens to a planet, but it is measured in individuals. Holding both of those realities at the same time is the challenge, and at this year’s CROI, no one did it better than Fatima Hassan and Gregg Gonsalves who shared a screen and billing, as joint presenters of the esteemed Martin Delaney Lecture. The pair delivered it not as a lecture but a conversation, thinking aloud about pernicious manifestations of vaccine nationalism and the inadequacy of current purchasing arrangements to circumvent a level of medical apartheid in vaccine distribution not seen since the era in which they fought for universal access to antiretrovirals. The conversation was simultaneously intimate and impassioned, which may have been why a comment Hassan made in passing nearly moved me to tears. She said she didn’t expect to see Gregg, a friend for two decades, “for years.”

Hassan and Gonsalves said many critical things in their talk—which CROI has made available (an exception to a new and regrettable policy that all 2021 content will remain behind a paywall for six months). Their clear, methodical and damning conversation tied today’s pandemic to the early years of HIV/AIDS. Gonsalves quoted irascible, irreplaceable AIDS activist Larry Kramer who said that HIV/AIDS was about “disposable people”, the Black, brown, queer, immigrant and poor people who are not valued by the capitalist state. “Now we see [with COVID] another set of disposable people,” Gonsalves said. “Many of us didn’t think we would have to see this again.”

Immediately after their talk, a working group came together to draft and launch a Call for Vaccine Equity and it was subsequently published in BMJ. It outlined a set of demands including a call for the United States government to incentivize pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson to share knowledge on how to produce their vaccines; World Trade Organization members to waive the trade-related intellectual property (TRIPS) provisions that serve as a barrier to generic production; and COVAX partners to acknowledge that its anticipated vaccine coverage rates of 20 percent of the population of countries dependent on COVAX facilities is simply too low. The cost of inaction will be measured in numbers that sometimes make the mind go numb; it will also be measured in the time that comrades spend separated by continents but bound in the common fight for equity.

This is not a test: Time to tackle HIV diagnostics, counseling messages, pricing and more for PrEP in its many forms

CROI brought new information on long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA) for PrEP, which has previously shown high levels of efficacy in reducing risk of HIV in gay men and other men who have sex with men and transgender people who have sex with men in a trial called HPTN 083; and in cisgender women, in a trial called HPTN 084.

Building on data presented at AIDS 2020, Dr. Raphy Landovitz presented an in-depth analysis of the timing of HIV infection in HPTN 083 participants, relative to when they were diagnosed with HIV, what product they were receiving, and how much of the drug was present in their blood.

A highly-detailed summary of the findings can be found here, in Gus Cairns’ always-excellent coverage for aidsmap. Broadly speaking, there are three key findings that advocates will need to react to and act on as part of a comprehensive PrEP agenda:

1. In people using injectable CAB-LA and daily oral TDF/FTC PrEP, standard HIV tests do not always provide accurate, real-time results. Most HIV tests look for antibodies to the virus and/or antigen (a molecule found on the surface of the virus) from HIV. People who have very low levels of HIV, or who have acquired HIV very recently, do not always have antibodies to the virus—and so they will test “negative” on standard diagnostics. Taking an antiretroviral like CAB-LA can suppress HIV to very low levels for a time, meaning that people who acquire HIV while receiving the injection may not test positive on standard diagnostics.

This was the case for four participants in HPTN 083 who acquired HIV even though they had received shots of CAB-LA as scheduled. These individuals did, eventually, test positive on the standard HIV antibody and antigen tests used at study visits, but when the trial team looked back at blood samples from these four people at prior visits, and used more sensitive laboratory diagnostics, they found that each had acquired HIV weeks, if not months, prior to the first positive test result at the site. Landovitz said there is “a need to look [for HIV] with diagnostics that are appropriately sensitive. And with long-acting agents for prevention [e.g., cabotegravir], currently available diagnostics are blunted or delayed in sensitivity.”

A presentation by Dr. Donn Colby looking at people using daily oral PrEP in Thailand also found eight individuals who had HIV at the time that they initiated oral PrEP but tested negative on standard HIV tests at enrollment. Five of these individuals tested were identified via a pooled RNA test (a group of samples tested for signs of HIV genetic material, which is detectable earlier after infection than antigen or antibody). Three individuals tested positive after starting PrEP. As in HPTN 083, the site went back to look at previously collected samples and found viral RNA when an array of standard tests gave a “negative” result.

The number of people with HIV whose virus isn’t picked up via standard tests is relatively small. Colby estimated about one case of acute infection (the term for the very early phase after HIV acquisition) per 400 people initiating PrEP at the Thai PrEP clinic; in HPTN 083, the four individuals with HIV at baseline (described above) were out of a group of 2,282—which is one per 570.

But even with these small numbers, there are big questions: how should the risk of a false negative be conveyed to people when they start a PrEP strategy like CAB-LA where it appears that there can be a long interval between infection and diagnosis via antibody/antigen tests? What approaches can be used in programs when a person is starting PrEP initiation? Finding people with acute HIV infection allows them to start treatment right away if they choose to do so. It also minimizes the risk that a person with HIV will start single-drug PrEP, which can lead to drug resistance.

Both of the solutions shared at CROI are practical in some ways and present challenges in other ways. In the Thai clinic, people who report a behavior in the past month that is associated with high risk of HIV are initiated on three-drug ART for the first month of PrEP, before a confirmatory negative test allows them to shift from three-drug ART to a single drug for PrEP. Both Colby and Landovitz talked about the need to consider using viral load assays to confirm HIV status. These tests, used to detect HIV in the blood of people living with the virus, are far more sensitive than diagnostics; they’re also far more expensive. Hearing this suggestion, in the context of ongoing gaps in coverage of viral load testing for people living with HIV, immediately made me think of the conversation around oral PrEP in the years following the first evidence of its efficacy. Then, treatment waitlists and shortages of TDF/FTC for people living with HIV made a push for expanded rollout of TDF/FTC for prevention untenable for many activists. Calls to introduce viral load testing as a diagnostic for either CAB-LA, oral PrEP or the Dapivirine Vaginal Ring must happen in the context of a concerted, funded effort to provide universal viral load coverage—at least one viral load test per year—to all people living with HIV. This is by no means a given.

CROI itself featured presentations on approaches that could provide cheap, early alternatives to viral load tests as means of determining when a person’s current HIV drug combination is no longer suppressing her virus. (A detectable viral load is used as a sign of “treatment failure.”) Dr. Jose Castillo-Mancilla presented on the use of dried blood spot tests to detect emtricitabine triphosphate. This form of TDF/FTC is only detectable in the blood within 36 hours after a person has taken a pill; testing for presence or absence is a way of finding out whether a person has recently missed a dose. Castillo-Mancilla and his colleagues found that people with no detectable emtricitabine triphosphate were more likely to have detectable viral loads in the future. Dr. Jacantha Odayar and her colleagues in a South Africa study found that presence or absence of tenofovir diphosphate (another form TDF/FTC takes as it is broken down, or metabolized, in the body) in blood predicted future viremia in pregnant women. Such tests, which focus on TDF/FTC containing regimens, could be used as a “early warning” system for predicting virologic failure among people living with HIV.

2. Counseling needs to catch up to high-tech PrEP. Landovitz’s presentation also suggested that rolling out CAB-LA for PrEP will require counseling strategies for people who test positive while receiving the injections as prescribed. In HPTN 083, one of the people who acquired HIV, despite on-time injections, initially refused to accept the diagnosis in part because standard test results were inconclusive. This individual opted for a month of post-exposure prophylaxis instead of starting treatment. Delays in diagnosis, confounding results on standard diagnostics and individual disbelief in positive test results will all come up in “real-world” use. Counseling and follow-up must be developed with these needs in mind.

A presentation by Dr. Catherine Koss from the SEARCH study offered another reminder that social networks play a key role in PrEP use. The study made a valuable investment in looking at both community, social and structural aspects impacting health behaviors. SEARCH used an elaborate system of contact mapping and concluded that people who knew someone using PrEP were 57 percent more likely to use PrEP themselves. Destigmatizing and normalizing PrEP so that people talk about it when they choose to use it (or stop or restart it), and incorporating peer-to-peer support for all forms of PrEP into programs will likely be key.

Resistance happens among people taking CAB-LA but not necessarily during the “tail”. Long-acting products like CAB-LA include a period, after a person has stopped receiving injections, when the drug is still in the body but at levels that don’t provide protection against infection—often referred to as the “tail”. (For any PrEP strategy, there’s a blood-drug level that’s associated with prevention; you don’t need “some” PrEP drug but “enough” to reduce HIV risk.) There’s been real concern about drug resistance arising in people who acquire HIV during the tail. But in the three people who fell into this category in HPTN 083, none had HIV with genetic mutations that render it resistant to integrase inhibitors, the class of drug that includes cabotegravir. This number is too small to support conclusions about the risk of resistance, but in this handful of people, resistance didn’t emerge during the tail. When integrase inhibitor resistance did emerge in HPTN 083 participants, it was in people who were infected and also receiving the injections: one of the people who had HIV at the time of enrollment developed resistance, as did two people who acquired HIV during the oral lead-in phase (a trial period where individuals took the pill form of CAB-LA before receiving the injection, to ensure that the drug was well-tolerated). Two people who acquired HIV while receiving CAB-LA injections also developed integrase inhibitor resistance; two others had so little virus in their blood that the team could not get a resistance test. The take-home message—at least from this trial—is that the risk of resistance is greater when people acquire HIV while taking CAB-LA as prescribed than it is in people who’ve stopped receiving the injection, i.e., in the context of the “tail”. Cabotegravir is an integrase inhibitor, as is dolutegravir (DTG), which is used as first-line treatment in many settings. The people with integrase-inhibitor-resistant virus responded to alternative regimens, including TDF/FTC-efavirenz-based therapy and a regimen using a boosted protease inhibitor. In resource-constrained settings where countries have fully embraced DTG-based first-line therapy, it will be essential to plan for CAB-LA introduction in the context of treatment options for those with integrase inhibitor-resistance.

3. Injectable PrEP is “superior” to oral PrEP among people who can’t or don’t adhere to the daily pill. Landovitz also presented an analysis of serum and dried blood spot samples from HPTN 083 participants who were assigned to receive daily oral TDF/FTC, the comparison arm of the study. (In each arm, people also received a dummy, or “inert” version of the other product—people randomized to TDF/FTC received saline injections, people receiving CAB-LA injections received dummy pills.) Thirty-seven of the 39 individuals who were prescribed and counseled on the active daily pill and went on to acquire HIV had “suboptimal or non-adherent” levels of the drug in their samples at the time of infection. The study concluded that CAB-LA was “superior” to oral TDF/FTC. These new data clarify that people who received CAB-LA injections on schedule every two months had a substantially lower risk of HIV than people who received daily oral PrEP but did not or were not able to take it as prescribed. In other words, the difference in incidence rates relates to product use, and not the product itself.

One strategy is not inherently superior to the other, i.e., injections and daily oral PrEP each taken exactly as prescribed may well provide comparable levels of protection; the study didn’t evaluate this question.

Products exist in the real world, where people’s lives, circumstances, bodies and preferences play a role in what’s possible and pleasurable. In the real world—as several CROI presentations highlighted—starting and staying on daily oral PrEP is a challenge for some. The 083 data say much the same. “Choice is the answer,” declared the inimitable Dr. Linda-Gail Bekker in her plenary presentation, emphasizing that many oral PrEP programs see people using the strategy with complex patterns of starting and re-initiation. Understanding these patterns of use—and their impact on both individual risk and population incidence—is key to understanding the impact of PrEP.

Time to calculate the cost of progress—and of inaction

CROI also brought updates from product developers working on other types of long-acting PrEP, including a one-year implant containing the drug islatravir that could be placed under the skin for continuous protection, and a Dapivirine Vaginal Ring (DVR) that could be worn for three months. This is three times as long as a monthly ring that has received a favorable opinion from the European Medicines Agency and been recommended by the WHO. The International Partnership for Microbicides is presently submitting the monthly DVR for regulatory approval in a range of countries.

Islatravir (both as an annual implant and as a monthly pill, which is now in efficacy trials), a three-month ring and the six-monthly injectable lenacapavir look promising and would make choice-based programming real by expanding options and allowing prevention programs to meet people where they are. Long-acting PrEP might, for example, play a role in HIV prevention for postpartum or breastfeeding women. A study of PrEP use among pregnant and breastfeeding women found higher PrEP uptake among pregnant women compared to those who were not pregnant, and a drop-off in PrEP use during breastfeeding. But risk remains high for HIV-negative women who are breastfeeding—a reminder that matching prevention offerings with lifecycle events is a life-saving imperative.

All of these offerings will come at a cost, of course. A “superior” strategy like CAB-LA could reduce HIV in many people, but could also require new testing tools and counseling strategies—and still won’t work for everyone, including transgender individuals with buttock implants, unless an alternate injection site can be identified. A 90-day ring and a one-year implant will, similarly, offer transformative options for reducing HIV risk, but will not address rates of STIs that remain very high in many study populations. Transformative PrEP programs will be ones that offer choice in both HIV and contraceptive options, and sexual and reproductive health care, including STI prevention and treatment, for people of all gender identities and sexual orientations. It’s not possible to plan or budget for such programs without knowing the cost of the products themselves. To date, ViiV, the developer of CAB-LA, has not set a price for CAB-LA. A modeling study presented by Dr. Anne Neilan asked the question, “How much should we be willing to pay for CAB-LA for MSM and transgender women, compared to generic daily oral TDF/FTC, or branded FTC/TAF.” Using a set of prices specific to the Global North, Neilan and her colleagues proposed that the injection would need to be priced comparably to generic daily oral PrEP for it to be considered “cost effective”.

While such models and projections always have limitations, they provoke useful and necessary discussions. Will the price be set according to this calculation? If it is not, will gaps in PrEP access open as they once did with antiretrovirals for HIV, and as they have for COVID-19 vaccines? Or will the HIV field, in all its diversity, set an example for how to learn from history and advance equity for the future?

At the end of CROI, I was no more certain of this than when I might see my Ugandan friend again—or when Hassan and Gonsalves might next sit side by side in real life. But I did know, in my bones, that if there was progress towards equity and justice it would come from the human connections between activists, allies and friends that have always transcended physical distance out of love and anger, and a commitment to lasting change.