Monday, June 6, 2011

HPTN 052 results and Partners PrEP (part II)

...is Partners PrEP unethical?

If HIV prevention research requires maximal risk reduction for all participants, then it appears unethical based on the 052 data. Maximal risk reduction would involve treating all of the HIV+ partners in the study, even if doing so were inconsistent with answering the study question.

For those who do not take a hard line on maximal risk reduction in HIV prevention, a study offering submaximal risk reduction might be justified by the value of the study question (and its methodological incompatibility with providing maximal risk reduction). Arguably, HPTN 052 undermines the value of Partners PrEP data: why would we pursue a PrEP strategy--giving ARVs to the HIV- partner for prevention--when giving the ARVs to the HIV+ partner virtually eliminates transmission? Is PrEP a viable strategy in serodiscordant couples?

Some arguments for why it might still be:
1. in some couples, the HIV+ partner will decline therapy or will not take ARVs regularly. In these couples, a method controlled by the HIV- partner has value.
2. the HIV- partner may have risk factors other than sexual contact with the stable romantic partner (e.g. concurrent relationships). PrEP could be a viable strategy for protecting these individuals.
3. outside of stable serodiscordant couples, there are high-risk individuals (e.g. sex workers) who would be candidates for a PrEP strategy. Partners PrEP could provide scientific support for this strategy outside of serodiscordant couples.

Here's one thing we can say about these arguments: for some couples in Partners PrEP, none of the arguments will offer a reason why that couple is better off. Whenever this is true, then potential benefit to the study participant is being traded in favor of scientific knowledge and/or public health benefit. So we are accepting that some couples are probably left worse off by the Partners regimen (especially in the control group) than they would be on the 052 regimen.

Another important (?) factor: Partners PrEP meets or exceeds local standards of care in the communities where it is being conducted. If maximal risk reduction represents one end of the spectrum, the opposite end of the spectrum is the view that local standards of care represent the baseline or minimal standard for research. For those who are sympathetic to this view, the 052 data would not disturb the assumption that Partners PrEP should continue as designed, unless it suddenly appeared that Partners PrEP had no value from a public health standpoint.

So perhaps the question is where the default lies. If the maximal risk reduction is the default, then the ongoing value of Partners PrEP is probably not compelling enough to justify the deviation (assuming that we're willing to allow any deviations). If local standards are the default, then the ongoing value of Partners PrEP is probably sufficient to justify continuation as designed. If we are disposed towards a moderate view--somewhere between the two extremes--it will be tougher to determine whether Partners PrEP should continue as designed.

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