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VOICE
statement on the article "HIV-negative women test positive
after drug trials"
VOICE
November 15,
2011
The article,
"HIV-negative women test positive after drug trials"-
The Sunday Mail, November 13-19, 2011 is based on a complete misunderstanding
of how HIV prevention trials work. The kind of trial that the article
portrays would be totally unethical and is far removed from what
actually occurs.
In HIV prevention
trials, we do everything possible to reduce a participant's
risk of acquiring HIV. For instance, in VOICE, we counsel all our
participants about safe sex practices, provide free condoms -
and strongly encourage their use, and test for and treat sexually
transmitted infections. The reason we conduct clinical trials, of
course, is to determine whether a new method is safe and effective,
and we do this by comparing the new method in question to a non-active
placebo product.
All participants
still receive the HIV prevention tools we know can work, but some
participants will be provided the new method, while other participants
will receive the placebo product. However, very few couples use
condoms every time they have sex and there will inevitably be slip-ups
among clinical trial participants. This happens in real life and
it happens in research, despite our best advice to empower participants
to protect themselves. In the case of the VOICE trial, 5029 women
from South Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe are helping to test three
different products that could provide added protection against HIV
in women. These products are a tenofovir tablet, a Truvada tablet
and tenofovir gel.
The study in
Zimbabwe started in September 2009 and 630 women have since volunteered
at 3 sites - Spilhaus, Seke South and Zengeza. When they enrolled,
the women were randomly assigned to one of five study groups -
either tenofovir tablet, Truvada tablet or placebo tablet, or tenofovir
gel or a placebo gel, and they were asked to use their assigned
product every day throughout the trial. While the study is ongoing,
neither we, as the researchers, nor the participants know who is
using the placebo product and who is taking the real thing. But
as we describe above, all the women are counselled about the ways
they can reduce their risk of HIV and receive free condoms at every
monthly visit.
A Data and Safety
Monitoring Board (DSMB) is an independent group of clinical research
experts, statisticians, ethicists and often community representatives
that provides additional oversight to a clinical study. The DSMB
for VOICE has conducted five routine reviews of the study to date.
The most recent DSMB review took place on
16 September 2011. Based on this interim review, the DSMB recommended
that VOICE stop evaluating the oral tenofovir tablet because it
will not be possible for the study to show a difference in effect
between the tenofovir tablet and the placebo. Subsequently, the
DSMB recommended that the 1,000 or so women randomised to the oral
tenofovir tablet group in VOICE - including the 127 women
here in Zimbabwe - discontinue their use of the study product.
The DSMB made it clear that its decision was not based on any concerns
about the safety of any of the study products including the oral
tenofovir tablet.
The VOICE trial
is proceeding testing of Truvada tablet and tenofovir gel, with
the DSMB continuing to safeguard the interests of the participants.
Not until we have completed the trial, will we know how many participants
in each group have acquired HIV. We expect to finish the study by
June 2012 and have results before the end of next year. In the meantime,
an important point to understand is that the way we designed VOICE,
we expect that in the course of the nearly three years the study
is being conducted that 217 women will acquire HIV - that's
217 women out of 5,029, across all five study groups and across
all 15 trial sites in Zimbabwe, Uganda and South Africa. Therefore,
the statement in the Sunday Mail article that 127 participants here
in Zimbabwe are "feared to be HIV positive" is both
inaccurate and highly, highly improbable.
It is a tragedy
that women become infected with HIV during clinical trials -
even when they receive excellent counselling on HIV prevention,
understand clearly how infection occurs, and have access to free
condoms. But it proves just how difficult it is for women to protect
themselves with the existing methods of prevention. And it builds
the case for continued research to develop woman-friendly methods
of HIV prevention. The women in our trials fully understand this
and have taken a conscious decision to play their part. As scientists,
we remain firmly committed to conducting scientifically and ethically
sound research which brings real benefits to women at risk around
the world.
VOICE is
a study of the Microbicide Trials Network. For more information
about VOICE and other studies, go to http://www.mtnstopshiv.org/news/studies
The Microbicides
Trials Network (MTN) is an HIV/AIDS clinical trials network established
in 2006 by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
with co-funding from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute
of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institute
of Mental Health, all components of the U.S. National Institutes
of Health. Based at Magee-Women's Research Institute and the
University of Pittsburgh, the MTN brings together international
investigators and community and industry partners who are devoted
to preventing or reducing the sexual transmission of HIV through
the development and evaluation of products applied topically to
mucosal surfaces or administered orally.
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