'Game changer': A shot every 2 months works better than a daily pill to prevent HIV, study says

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'Game changer': A shot every 2 months works better than a daily pill to prevent HIV, study says
France Dernières Nouvelles,France Actualités
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A new study finds that a long-acting injectable medication given as a shot every eight weeks is significantly more effective than a HIV prevention pill taken every day.

People are exposed to a coronavirus through mucus membranes of the eyes, nose and mouth via respiratory droplets.Thanks to modern medicine, we now have a once-daily pill that can prevent HIV, a virus that interferes with the body's ability to fight infections. However, experts say the pill doesn't work for everyone's lifestyle, and it's important for people to have other options so they can better protect themselves from HIV infection.

"We know that if you take Truvada every day the effect is very good, so here we were hoping that results of a new agent would be just as good," said Del Rio, the Executive Associate Dean of Emory University School of Medicine at Grady Health System."What we showed at the end of the study was that cabotegravir was superior to Truvada."

Overall, 52 people became HIV positive during the course of the study. There were 39 incident infections in the Truvada group, but only 13 in the cabotegravir group. In other words, cabotegravir had a significantly lower rate of HIV infections and was a more successful agent in preventing the transmission of HIV overall.

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