via Kaiser Family Foundation
Experts gathered at a joint meeting of UNAIDS and the WHO last week  called for two additional clinical trials to test the effectiveness and  safety of a microbicide vaginal gel containing the antiretroviral  tenofovir, which previous studies have shown reduces the risk of HIV transmission in women who used it before and after sex by 39 percent, PANA/Afrique en ligne reports (9/5).
"The results of the first trial of the tenofovir-based gel,  [conducted by the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South  Africa (CAPRISA)] … announced in July at the XVIII International AIDS  Conference in Vienna, must be confirmed before the product can be made  available for general use," U.N. News Centre reports.
The follow-up trials will build off of "[t]he CAPRISA study  [which] was conducted in South Africa with women aged 18 to 40 years who  used the gel once during the 12 hours before sex and once during the 12  hours after sex," the news service continues. One of the two trials,  which will also be held in South Africa, will test the effectiveness of  the microbicide in "sexually active 16- and 17-year-olds in settings  where HIV incidence is high," according to the U.N. News Centre.
"The other study will be conducted in other African countries and  examine if a different dosing schedule is safe and effective. It will  test if a single application of the gel before sex, or failing that  immediately after, is equally effective and safe as the original  two-dose regimen," the news service adds (9/3).
According to VOA News,  "The first trials are likely to get under way early next year. The next  phase of the research is estimated to cost $100 million." The article  includes comments by UNAIDS Chief Scientific Adviser Catherine Hankins  (Schlein. 9/3).
Pharma Times,  also reporting on the meeting, writes, "An ongoing trial being  conducted by the Microbicides Trial Network, which is evaluating the  same gel used daily, will generate additional data on safety and product  use. Research in the communities where the CAPRISA 004 trial was  carried out will look at how to best promote, distribute and monitor gel  use through existing family planning facilities." The news service  continues, "While participants at the meeting in Johannesburg agreed on  research priorities for the tenofovir gel, concerns were expressed over  the limited funding committed so far to carry forward the next phase of  research" (Mansell, 9/7).
The New York Times  reports that "about $58 million of the $100 million needed for  follow-up research has been pledged, according to UNAIDS." The newspaper  explores the perception that donor nations are rethinking their  commitments because of "shifting global health priorities and tight  finances," and how "[e]xperts say investing in AIDS prevention is  fiscally far preferable to the costs for lifelong treatment." The  article includes quotes from Stefano Bertozzi of the Bill & Melinda  Gates Foundation, Nomfundo Eland of Treatment Action Campaign, Hankins  of UNAIDS, and Mead Over of Center for Global Development (Dugger, 9/3).
Source.