After eight years of follow-up of the so-called serodifferent
couples, the study found no cases at all of HIV transmission within
couples.
The study proves, the researchers said, that using antiretroviral
therapy to suppress the AIDS virus to undetectable levels also means
it cannot be passed on via sex, the researchers said.
"Our findings provide conclusive evidence for gay men that the risk
of HIV transmission with suppressive ART is zero," said Alison
Rodger, a professor at University College London who co-led the
research.
She said this "powerful message" could help end the HIV pandemic by
preventing the virus' transmission in high-risk populations. In this
study alone, for example, the researchers estimate that the
suppressive antiretrovial treatment prevented around 472 HIV
transmissions during the eight years.
The study, published in the Lancet medical journal on Thursday,
assessed the risk of HIV transmission between serodifferent gay male
couples - where one partner is HIV-positive and one is HIV-negative
- who do not use condoms.
Its findings add to an earlier phase of the study which looked at
HIV transmission risk for serodifferent heterosexual couples in the
same circumstances. It also found zero risk.
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While 15 of the men among the 972 gay couples in this phase did
become infected with HIV during the eight years of follow-up,
genetic testing showed their infections were with strains of HIV
acquired from another sexual partner.
Since the start of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s, more than 77
million people have become infected with HIV. Almost half of them -
35.4 million - have died of AIDS.
Global health experts say the fight against HIV is at a precarious
point, with the annual number of AIDS deaths falling and the number
of people getting antiretroviral treatment rising, but the number of
new infections stubbornly high at around 1.8 million new cases a
year worldwide.
(Editing by William Maclean)
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