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US PrEP prescriptions more likely to go to Southern women
Gus Cairns, 2013-09-13 18:30:00

A US survey of the prescribing of Truvada (tenofovir/emtricitabine) to HIV-negative people as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has found that, when participants in clinical trials and demonstration projects are excluded, PrEP recipients are more likely to live in the southern states and are more likely to be female than people receiving Truvada for HIV treatment.

It found that prescriptions for PrEP represented perhaps 1%  of all Truvada prescriptions, though use has grown slowly. However the majority of PrEP in the USA is still being prescribed in the context of clinical trials: this survey represents prescribing outside trials, by individual doctors in a variety of healthcare settings.  

In addition, the survey only acquired prescription information from 55% of all US pharmacies, so the true figure for PrEP prescriptions will be somewhat higher.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the use of Truvada as PrEP in July 2012. Although, so far at least, its use has only grown slowly, it began to gather speed even before the FDA approval. The survey found prescriptions for PrEP made out to 150 individuals in 2011.

In 2012 Truvada PrEP was prescribed to 1274 individuals, but only slightly more than half of these (681) were prescribed after the FDA approval. In the first quarter of 2013, 350 more individuals were prescribed PrEP, implying a total of at least 2000 for the whole year. However with Truvada being one of the most frequently-prescribed antiretroviral drugs for HIV treatment, this probably only represents 1-2%, at most, of Truvada prescribing in the USA.

A total of 620 healthcare professionals (37% of all those surveyed) were found to have prescribed PrEP at least once during the survey period, from January 2011 to March 2013.

The median age of PrEP recipients was 37 and there was a trend over time for PrEP recipients to get younger (3% of recipients were under 25 in 2011 compared with 14% overall).

PrEP was most likely to be prescribed by family practitioners (i.e. GPs) in the southern states, and primary care prescribing was also more common on the west coast. In areas other than the south PrEP was most likely to be prescribed by internal medicine practitioners (i.e. generalist physicians rather than the infectious disease specialists who would normally treat HIV) and in the Midwest it was often prescribed by emergency doctors too. However all broad medical specialities prescribedsome PrEP, including nurse practitioners, who prescribed about one in 10 courses.

The figures were derived by looking at all prescriptions for Truvada from the pharmacies surveyed and sequentially eliminating:

  • All prescriptions that included other antiretrovirals or hepatitis B drugs
  • All patients diagnosed with HIV or where these was any diagnosis of an AIDS-related opportunistic infection
  • All patients with chronic hepatitis B
  • All prescriptions for post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP).

The remainder were all deemed to be PrEP prescriptions.

When compared to people receiving Truvada for HIV treatment, PrEP recipients were 1.8 times more likely to be women, 1.4 times more likely to be under 24 years old, 1.4 times more likely to be from the Southern states and 3.8 times more likely to have Truvada prescribed by someone who was not an infectious diseases specialist.

In is important to emphasise that a high proportion of PrEP in the US is currently being prescribed in the context of a clinical trial or demonstration project. In California alone, the state HIV/AIDS research programme plans to enrol 4000 people in PrEP implementation trials. These may be more likely to be gay men attending larger sexual health centres.

Source:1