VOICE trial's disappointing result poses big questions for PrEP

Jeanne Marrazzo discusses results of the VOICE study at CROI 2013. © Liz Highleyman / hivandhepatitis.com
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The failure of one of the largest trials yet conducted of HIV drug-based prevention methods poses questions for how to turn vaginal microbicides and oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) into methods people can actually use, the 20th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI 2013) in Atlanta heard today.

The VOICE trial randomised 5029 women from three sites in South Africa, two in Zimbabwe and one in Uganda, although Durban in South Africa, with 3110 enrolled, provided more than half the participants. The women were randomised to use one of three prevention methods or two placebos (dummy methods):

  • daily Truvada (tenofovir plus emtricitabine) as PrEP;
  • daily tenofovir as PrEP;
  • a daily placebo pill looking like Truvada;
  • a tenofovir-containing gel, similar to that used in the CAPRISA 004 study, to be used as a vaginal microbicide;
  • an inert gel as a placebo microbicide.

The tenofovir oral PrEP arm, and the tenofovir vaginal gel and placebo arms of the trial were stopped due to futility in September and November 2011 respectively. ('Futility' means that the trial's data and safety monitoring board, which sees who is receiving treatment and who is receiving placebo, realised that there was no possibility that continuing the trial would produce a positive result.) The Truvada PrEP and placebo-pill arms, however, were continued.

Glossary

placebo

A pill or liquid which looks and tastes exactly like a real drug, but contains no active substance.

microbicide

A product (such as a gel or cream) that is being tested in HIV prevention research. It could be applied topically to genital surfaces to prevent or reduce the transmission of HIV during sexual intercourse. Microbicides might also take other forms, including films, suppositories, and slow-releasing sponges or vaginal rings.

oral

Refers to the mouth, for example a medicine taken by mouth.

detectable viral load

When viral load is detectable, this indicates that HIV is replicating in the body. If the person is taking HIV treatment but their viral load is detectable, the treatment is not working properly. There may still be a risk of HIV transmission to sexual partners.

retention in care

A patient’s regular and ongoing engagement with medical care at a health care facility. 

But the conference heard today that Truvada had also not proven effective in preventing HIV and that therefore all three methods had proved no better than placebo.

Results: infections

This was a group of relatively young (average age 25) and largely unmarried (79% single) women. Retention – keeping trial subjects attending appointments – was good, with only 9% dropping out of the study.

Self-reported condom use at last vaginal sex was very high, at 85%, but needs to be regarded with a degree of scepticism given the extreme disconnect (see below) between self-reported and actual adherence. Quite a high proportion of women (17%) reported anal sex in the last three months.

During the trial 334 of the women tested HIV positive, but 22 of them turned out to have entered the trial while actually having been infected with HIV very shortly beforehand and so not testing HIV antibody positive. This means 312, or 6.2% of participants became infected during the trial, which translates into an annual incidence rate (infection rate per year) of 5.7%, with strong geographical variance by site from 0.8% to 9.9%.

None of the three prevention methods resulted in fewer HIV infections than placebo. In the women using the tenofovir-gel microbicide there were 15% fewer infections versus placebo, but this was not statistically significant. In the oral PrEP arms there were actually more infections in women taking PrEP compared to placebo. Women taking Truvada were 4% more likely and women taking tenofovir alone 49% more likely to become HIV positive than women taking placebo and in the latter case this was almost statistically significant (95% confidence interval 0.97-2.29, p = 0.07).

Results: adherence

Adherence to the pills or microbicide, according to two different methods of self-report, was 90%. However analysis of drug levels in the blood and in the case of the microbicide in vaginal fluids showed a very different story, and one that is starting to be familiar in PrEP and microbicide studies: only 28-29% of women taking tenofovir or Truvada PrEP had measurable drug levels in their blood, and only 22% of women using tenofovir microbicide.

The assays used could detect whether drug had been taken in the last two days on oral PrEP, and used in the last three days in the case of microbicide gel, so some may possibly have used PrEP or microbicide some time since the previous trial visit, but 50 to 58% of women, depending on which group they were in, had no detectable drug in their blood at any trial visit.

Women who were married, were aged over 25, or who had a primary partner aged over 28, were more likely to have detectable drug levels. In particular, married women were 2.6 times more likely to have detectable drug.  

Married women were also very considerably less likely to acquire HIV than unmarried women: annual incidence in married women in South Africa was 0.9%, compared with 7.5% in unmarried women. Women over 25 were half as likely to acquire HIV as women under 25 (annual incidence in South African women were 4.7% and 8.7% respectively).

These results seem to back up what was found in the similarly ineffective FEM-PrEP trial and in a recent pilot trial of PrEP in young gay men: being young seems to make it particularly difficult to adhere to these biomedical prevention methods and, as the investigators comment, suggests that "products that are long-lasting and require minimal daily adherence may be more suitable for this population." They also called for more social research to determine which populations might benefit.

In addition, as an audience member commented, the benefits of joining a trial like VOICE in a resource-poor setting – health monitoring, condoms, the ability to talk about sex with a counsellor, and so on – may be so large as to make the disclosure of non-adherence, and of other lapses such as not using condoms, almost impossible in the perception of the participants.

References

Marrazzo J et al. Pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV in women: daily oral tenofovir, oral tenofovir/emtricitabine or vaginal tenofovir gel in the VOICE study (MTN 003). 20th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, Atlanta, abstract 26LB, 2013.

View abstract 26LB on the conference website.

A webcast of the session in which this research was presented, HIV prevention: ARV, counseling, contraception, and condoms, is available on the conference website.