New Biomedical Approaches
There may be even more ways for you to protect your health needs in the future. New research on preventing and someday curing HIV is constantly coming out. Here is some of the latest information about new biomedical approaches, or ways to prevent HIV through medicine and medical procedures
New forms of PrEP
We’ve already talked a lot about PrEP as an effective HIV prevention strategy. Currently in the US, the FDA has approved two drugs to be used as PrEP: Truvada and Descovy. In order to get the greatest protection from PrEP, you must
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- Take it every day
- Continue other safer sex practices like using condoms
- Get tested for HIV regularly.
Other drugs and different ways of taking PrEP continue to be tested in clinical trials for safety and effectiveness. For example, there may soon be PrEP that you can take just before you have sex or that can be injected and last for a longer time. However, regardless of options, PrEP’s protecting against HIV may be low when not taken as prescribed by a doctor.
Microbicides
Circumcision
Male circumcision is the removal of some or all of the penis foreskin. Many cultures have practiced male circumcision for centuries. Recently, research has tested if it could also be an HIV prevention tool.
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- The foreskin has a high number of cells that HIV targets for infection.
- The foreskin may be more likely to get tears during sex, making it easier for HIV to enter the body.
- STIs are more common in uncircumcised men, which increases the risk for HIV.
Many studies on male circumcision have been conducted in Africa, where circumcision is not as common as in the US. So far, results show that male circumcision reduces HIV risk for men during vaginal sex. Women do not seem to get any extra protection. Studies with men who have sex with men are inconclusive. Also, male circumcision does not protect against other STIs, so it is still best used in combination with condoms and PrEP.
Vaccines
Cure
There is still no realistic cure for HIV at this time. Recently, 2 HIV-positive patients have supposedly been cured by receiving stem cell transplants for cancer, which also caused their HIV to go into long-term remission. Scientists continue to study those cases and other ways of eliminating HIV from the body. Until then, we rely on effective medicines to treat HIV.
Treatment as Prevention / Undetectable = Untransmittable (U=U)
Note that HIV still exists in the body in people on HIV treatment. If an HIV-positive person stops taking their medication, their viral load will soon return to a detectable level. That is the difference between treatment and a cure.
Keep up with the latest research on biomedical approaches for HIV prevention through AVAC.