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May 2002 Cover
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Offering morning-after treatment to people potentially exposed to HIV through unprotected sex appears to ward off infection and does not increase risky sexual behavior, Brazilian researchers reported at the Ninth Conference
on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections.
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) is a 28-day regimen of high doses of ZDV and 3TC. PEP is already routinely administered to health care workers who have been jabbed with needles, but using it for people possibly
exposed to HIV through sex is controversial. Not only is there a lack of data on its effectiveness; some opponents fear that offering the drugs may encourage unsafe sex by providing a back-up method of staying HIV-free.
Researchers gave 200 gay men who tested negative for HIV a four-day supply of PEP. The men were instructed to begin taking the drugs two pills a day if they engaged in risky sexual behaviors, and to report to the
clinic within four days. Men who were deemed to have engaged in the study's criteria for risky sex unprotected anal, vaginal or oral sex were given a 24-day supply of the drugs to complete the regimen. Over the course of two
years, 73 participants used PEP 110 times. The men completed the full 28-day course 91 percent of the time. There were 11 cases of HIV infection during the course of the study: 10 among participants who did not use PEP and one
that occurred despite PEP due to a drug-resistant strain of HIV. Initially, 57 percent of the men reported engaging in unprotected sex, but this number had fallen to 40 percent at the study's end.
Editor's Note: from MSNBC
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