Can an anti-HIV drug break down wall between HIV-positive and HIV-negative men? - Action News
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Health

Can an anti-HIV drug break down wall between HIV-positive and HIV-negative men?

Health Canada and researchers say HIV-prevention drug Truvada is another line of defence to be used along with condoms, but preliminary results from a two-year study show condomless sex between HIV-positive men and HIV-negative men taking the drug increased among the study's 52 participants.

Study finds more HIV-positive and HIV-negative men having sex, but researcher continues to urge condom use

Daniel has found he no longer fears HIV because of taking PrEP ( Kyle McGregor/Daily Xtra)

Rob Easton is a Toronto-based freelance journalist and filmmaker who writes aboutLGBTissues, urbanism, and politics.

The first time Daniel heard about the use ofTruvadaas an HIV-prevention drugin 2011, he thought it was a horrible idea.

"I just thought, 'Wow, what an excuse for people to stop using condoms!' I thought it sounded dangerous," the Toronto man says of the drug known as a pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a once-a-day pill to prevent HIV transmission in high-risk populations such as gay men.

Daniel, 30, whose name is being withheld for privacy reasons, grew up in the shadow of the HIV crisis and saw condoms as the only effective barrier between him and the virus.

After decades of condoms-first sex education, he says he wasn't ready for what some see as a brave new world of HIV prevention.

Health Canada and researchers studying PrEP don't necessarily see it that way and insist people taking the drug should continue using condoms.

But preliminary results from a study called Preparatory 5 out of the St. Michael's HIV Prevention Clinic in Toronto foundcondomlesssex between HIV-positive men and HIV-negative men onPrEPincreasedamong the study's 52 participants.

Dr. Darrell Tan presenting preliminary findings from Preparatory 5 at the Canadian Association for HIV Research Conference in Winnipeg last month. (Canadian Association for HIV Research)

"From an HIV stigma perspective, that's a really positive thing to see that we're breaking down barriers that people may have in terms of their comfort with [HIV-positive]partners," says Dr.DarrellTan, the study's lead researcher, who nonetheless strongly recommends people takingPrEPcontinue to use condoms.

Daniel isn't a participant in the study, but his experience is similar to what the researchers have noticed.

Health Canada approved Truvada for PrEP in February, but the U.S. did so back in 2012. As Daniel began to hear more and more aboutits effectiveness, he started to notice a pattern in his sex life: a series of accidentsand quick decisionswhere the condom would break, slip offor not be put on in the first place.

"I recognized that I was having more and more unprotected sex," he says."It was not something that I was proud of, or generally happy about. But, you know, it happens and then you freak out, and then you go get tested, and then you get tested again in three months."

A recent study from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta shows condom use among younger gay men in decline for at least the past 10 years.

'Trying to be honest with myself'

So Daniel, in search of another option, says he decided to start takingPrEPin the spring of 2014.

"I was trying to be honest with myself about the reality of my sex life," he says.

In the beginning, he says he had less sex with fewer partners. He says he decided if he was going to ditch condoms, he would need to be "a lot less frivolous" about his partners. So he chose to meet up with people he knew or with whom hehad some prior relationship.

But as he explored this new world of what he considered optional condom use, he says he discovered something profound:"I never realized that sex scared me until I started takingTruvadaand I experienced the liberation of what it felt like not to be scared after having unprotected sex that I would become HIV-positive."

His comfort came from the knowledge thatTruvada, if taken daily, dramatically reduces the chances of HIV transmission. Its exact rate of effectivenessis a matter of some debate.The drug costs about $1,000 a month without insurance.

A PrEP education campaign poster put out by the AIDS Committee of Toronto ( Kyle McGregor/Daily Xtra)

And for men living with HIV, consistent use of antiretroviraltherapies (ARTs) also significantly reduces the chances of transmitting the virus.ARTscan lower an HIV-positive person's viral load to levels undetectable by most blood tests, which is the main indicator of their likelihood of transmission.

The preliminary results from the St. Michael's study suggest the power ofPrEP, if it were to become widely prescribed, combined with the success ofARTs,hasthe potential to chip away at a wall that's divided HIV-positive and HIV-negative men for decades.

BeforePrEPand undetectable viral loads, there were only two primary defences against HIV transmission: condoms and/or choosing partners based on HIV status.Known as "serosorting," the practice divided the gay community, as men without the virus would usually try topartner with other HIV-negative men, and HIV-positive men tended to partner up amongst themselves.

Daniel now says he actually prefers meeting up with men who are HIV-positive with an undetectable viral load.

"I thought HIV was really rare until I started asking people, which I did a lot less frequently than I do now and I began to realize that a lot of people I knew had HIV," he says. "And suddenly I became a lot less afraid of HIV and what that did was to open up this world of new partners who are people living with HIV who didn't scare me anymore."

Researchers still recommend wearing condoms

An HIV-positive person's health-care team closely monitors viral loads, other sexually transmitted diseases and other health issues, Daniel says, which is one of the reasons he says he prefers "poz" partners with undetectable viral loads.

"I can separate the fact of their being HIV-positive from getting to know them, having sex with them, enjoying sex with them. And that is a liberating thing that I'm actually really proud of, proud to say has happened to me."

Despite the effectiveness ofPrEPandARTs, researchers like Tan say PrEP shouldn't replace the use ofcondoms.

The St. Michael's researchers found none of the 52 men enrolled acquired HIV during their two-year study. ( Kyle McGregor/Daily Xtra)

Tan is helping to craft a set of national guidelines for PrEPthat will recommend use in conjunction with condoms in order to provide the greatest possible protection against HIV.

He says PrEP is a new tool that should be used along with condoms, which are effective, cheapand help prevent other sexually transmitted diseases. The reality, he says, is few people successfully use condoms every time they have sex and that's where PrEP can be an effective second line of defence.

And when Health Canada approved PrEP back in February, it recommended testing for HIV before starting the drug;screening for and, when necessary, treatment of sexually transmitted diseases; regularand frequent testing for HIV while usingTruvada; andthe use of condoms.

PrEPdoesn't protect against other sexually transmitted diseasessuch as syphilis, gonorrheaandchlamydia, all of which have beenon the rise in recent years.

Daniel is aware of this, but says he chooses to havecondomlesssex for now and will monitor the situation closely.

"You know obviously nobody wants to get an STD, but for the moment they're treatable."