Microbicide may offer women some protection from HIV, study finds
By Rose Hoban (VOA News) 17 February 2009: While many scientists search desperately for ways to cure AIDS, others have devoted their time to finding better ways to prevent the spread of the deadly virus that causes it - HIV.
http://www.voanews.com/english/Science/2009-02-17-voa51.cfm
Condoms have been shown to be effective at blocking transmission of
the virus between people. But in many parts of the world, men don't -
or won't - use them.
Now new research is showing promise for a microbicide - a substance
that kills HIV on contact. The idea behind a microbicide is to keep a
woman from being infected when she has sex with an HIV-positive
man.
A young HIV-infected woman lying in an Abidjan hospital
"Microbicides are substances that can be applied in the vagina or
rectum… they are there to substantially reduce the risk of getting
HIV," says Dr. Lameck Chinula, who works with the University of North
Carolina at a site in Malawi.
"This is of great importance, especially in the setting of countries
like Malawi, where most women are not so empowered that they can
negotiate for condom use," Chinula says.
Chinula was part of an international team of scientists who are part of
the Microbicide Trials Network. Researchers in five countries gave
microbicide gels to more than 3,000 women to use over a period of a
year and a half.
During the study, women got either the active microbicide gel, another
gel intended to block - but not kill - HIV, or an inactive gel. The
women were also given condoms, treatment for sexually transmitted
diseases and instruction on how to prevent getting HIV.
"The idea is, you have a woman who would apply the gel if she thinks
she will have intercourse with a man… in advance, or without actually
asking the partner to put on a condom," Chinula says.
The first finding was that the gel did not increase a woman's chance of
acquiring HIV. Some earlier attempts at microbicides had had that
effect.
The most important finding is that the microbicide reduced the rate at
which women contracted HIV. Some of the women using the microbicide did
get the disease, but they acquired it at a lower rate than other women
in the study.
"We may not have enough evidence to say that they protect women from
getting HIV," Chinula says. "But I'm very optimistic these gels may
offer some protection to women."
Chinula says these results add vital data to speed the development of
an effective microbicide, which could give women a tool to protect
themselves in the future.
The study results were announced at the annual Conference on
Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Montreal.

