|
Back to Index
Another
setback for microbicide research
IRIN News
February 18, 2008 http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76811
Johannesburg
- The first microbicide candidate to reach the final phase of testing
has failed to prevent HIV transmission, researchers announced on
Monday.
Testing of the microbicide,
Carraguard, was carried out over a three-year period on 6,000 women
in South Africa, and was completed in March 2007. But there was
no difference in HIV infections between women in the group using
Carraguard compared to the placebo group.
"The trial ... was
unable to demonstrate Carraguard's efficacy in preventing HIV transmission,"
noted Dr Khatija Ahmed, principal investigator of the trial.
The microbicide developed
by the Population Council, an international non-profit organisation,
contains carrageenan, which is derived from seaweed and widely used
in the food and cosmetics industries as a gel, stabiliser and thickening
agent.
Laboratory, animal and
early human tests suggested it might prevent HIV and other sexually
spread infections, but Ahmed admitted that "what Carraguard
showed in the lab couldn't be converted to humans".
She suggested that the
low adherence rate could have been a factor: women who participated
in the study used Carraguard less than half the number of times
they had sex, and only 10 percent said they used it every time as
directed. However, condom use shot up from 33 percent when the study
began, to 64 percent.
While acknowledging that
the news was a disappointment, Ahmed stressed that the Carraguard
trial was a "major milestone for microbicide development",
as the trial had been completed with no safety concerns being raised.
This is another setback
in the race to develop an effective microbicide - applied via a
range of products like gels, films and sponges - that could help
women prevent the transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted
infections.
In 2000, a large full-scale
trial showed that nonoxynol-9, a potential microbicide, was unsafe
after women in the study developed a higher risk of HIV infection.
Seven years later, microbicide
research was dealt another blow when the US-based reproductive health
research organisation, CONRAD, announced the premature end of trials
of a cellulose sulphate-based microbicide after the data safety
and monitoring committee found a higher number of infections in
the active group compared to the placebo group.
Advocates and researchers
are reluctant to describe this trial as a setback. Fiona Scorgie,
programmes coordinator at the Gender AIDS Forum, a non-governmental
organisation monitoring microbicide trials in South Africa, told
IRIN/PlusNews that although the end result had been disappointing,
the trial had been "successful on another level".
The women participating
in the trials had benefited from regular health screenings, while
the safety of Carraguard meant that it could be used in future microbicide
trials as a "vehicle for more specific substances, like antiretrovirals",
but further development was needed.
According to Scorgie,
communities also had to be involved in the process, rather than
being passive recipients. "Communities have a very important
role to play ... it's important that we inform ourselves and remain
critical".
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|