Future of AIDS gels may lie in drugs, experts say

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A woman who is infected with HIV prepares her medicines in a shelter house in Jayapura of the Indonesia Papua province November 27, 2008. REUTERS/Oka Barta Daud

A woman who is infected with HIV prepares her medicines in a shelter house in Jayapura of the Indonesia Papua province November 27, 2008.

Credit: Reuters/Oka Barta Daud

WASHINGTON | Sat Feb 20, 2010 9:56pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The quest for a cream or gel to prevent AIDS infection has narrowed to using powerful HIV pills that are already on the market, scientists say.

AIDS experts have long been searching for a microbicide -- a cream, gel or vaginal ring that women or men could use as a chemical shield to protect themselves from sexual transmission of the deadly and incurable virus.

Several substances have been tried unsuccessfully but experiments presented this week at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, a scientific meeting of AIDS experts, suggested HIV drugs might hold the key to making such gels work.

"The next wave of compounds is all going to be based on antiretroviral drugs," Dr. John Moore of Weill Cornell Medical College in New York told reporters.

Moore's team tested Pfizer's new drug maraviroc, sold under the brand name Selzentry. It is in a new class of drugs called CCR5 entry inhibitors, designed to stop the human immunodeficiency virus from getting into human cells using a type of cellular doorway or receptor named CCR5.

"The CCR5 inhibitors are compelling candidates as an alternative because these drugs are not being used for treatment in, for example, Africa," Moore said.

That means there is less risk of resistance developing -- when viruses evolve to get around the effects of drugs.

Moore's team took a unique approach to formulating their experimental microbicide using Selzentry.

"We found a friendly physician, scrounged a tablet, ground it up," Moore said. "I assure you it actually works very well," he told the San Francisco meeting.

Tests in monkeys showed it would protect a female from sexual transmission for about four hours. "You couldn't apply these gels in the morning and have protection in the evening," Moore said.

A vaginal ring with a time-release formula may work better for longer-term protection, Moore said.

The approach is affordable, he said. "A single maraviroc tablet, about 300 mg, retailing for about $15 on the Internet, contains enough drug to fully protect around 15 macaques. That is broadly going to be applicable to women."

Laura Guay of the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation said the approach sounds reasonable. Her group supports the development of microbicides to protect women and by extension their children.

"The hope is by putting antiretrovirals into the microbicide, you can prevent the virus from either entering or replicating," she said in a telephone interview.

Last year researchers found Gilead Sciences Inc.'s drug Truvada also might work as a microbicide. But a gel made by Massachusetts-based Indevus Pharmaceuticals that did not include an HIV drug failed in human trials.

The AIDS virus, which infects 33 million people globally and has killed 25 million, is mostly passed sexually. In Africa women account for more new cases than men and are often infected by their husbands.

Abstinence and condom use are not options for women trying to have children, but a microbicide would be. Microbicides using HIV drugs would represent a large new market for the companies that make the drugs, which are currently now used only to treat infection.

(Editing by Alan Elsner)

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Comments (7)
MatthewD wrote:
The antivirals sound nice but I’ve never heard of someone outside of the medical field using them. They are a good idea if someone was just cheated on or risked infection. I don’t see a gel doing as much as increasing advertisement for the pills if you just incurred a high risk activity. Nothing quite as scary as just having slept with someone that was trusted, then they tell you they had risky sex with someone you don’t know. Six months is a long time to get tested and people in the medical field start antivirals right after an accident.

Feb 21, 2010 7:01am EST  --  Report as abuse
No the future of fighting aids does not lie in drugs. It lies in improved immune systems and highly adaptive bodies through advanced technologies like Yoga and Ayurveda. Drugs don’t do any good in the long term – they are a way for Big Pharma to make profits because the population at large remains uneducated and ignorant.

Feb 21, 2010 9:12am EST  --  Report as abuse
whyJoe wrote:
@StupidDemocrats: The future of fighting AIDS lies in Yoga? Maybe you should revisit your username, I don’t think you are qualified to call anyone stupid.

Feb 21, 2010 11:07am EST  --  Report as abuse
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