New boost for nevirapine
2006-02-09 08:50
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UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has warned governments against using the economic crisis as an excuse to cut funding for fighting Aids.
Atlanta - The drug nevirapine prevents the spread of the Aids virus from mother to child time after time, a new study suggests, challenging earlier findings about the drug.
The new research found that in Ugandan women who received the drug during a first pregnancy, the drug prevented HIV transmission during second pregnancies as well.
The research may ease concerns - raised in previous studies - that HIV develops resistance to the drug, said Dr Michael Thigpen, a medical epidemiologist with the US Centre for Disease Control and Prevention.
"Based on these findings, we believe nevirapine in repeat pregnancies remains an effective option in these resource-limited countries," said Thigpen, part of the research team.
The study looked at 198 women treated in 2004 and 2005 at a hospital in Kampala, Uganda. Its results were presented on Wednesday at a scientific meeting in Denver.
Nevirapine is an inexpensive and easy-to-take medication that's become a mainstay in the effort to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission in poor countries. Proponents say nevirapine cuts the transmission risk in half.
Mothers receive a pill when they go into labour, and their newborns get the medication in a syrup within 72 hours of birth.
The drug came into question in earlier studies done in South Africa and Uganda, which found that 20% to 40% of HIV-infected women developed resistance to nevirapine after taking one dose to protect their newborns from getting the infection.
HIV infection
The research presented on Wednesday found that HIV infection rate was 14.6% for babies born to nevirapine-treated women who also took the drug during a previous pregnancy. The rate was 17.6% for nevirapine-treated women who were not given the drug during an earlier pregnancy.
The research is good news, said Mark Isaac, a vice president for the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric Aids Foundation, which funds HIV/Aids research and worldwide treatment programs.
A study of multiple pregnancies in South Africa and Ivory Coast, also announced on Wednesday, produced similar results. Three other studies showed low risks of nevirapine resistance in women who took the medicine more than a year after the initial dose.
"It's fair to say we're breathing a sigh of relief," Isaac said.
Thigpen noted there are different subtypes of HIV, and one that circulates in southern Africa appears especially resistant to nevirapine.
"In Uganda, there are a couple of different subtypes. That (fact) may limit our ability to associate these findings with other areas of Africa," Thigpen said, referring to his study's findings.
- AP