Annual job trial for HIV protection pass

Annual job trial for HIV protection pass

Michel Roberts
Digital Health Editor, BBC News
Getty images

An annual injection designed for guards against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) has completed an important initial safety test, researchers reported in the report Lancet medical Journal.

The Lenkapavir prevents the virus from copying inside the cells.

If future tests run well – now this first phase I, phase I, have tested the test barrier – it can become the longest acting form of available HIV prevention.

currently, People can take daily pills or sometimes injected every eight weeksTo reduce their risk, for pre-exposure Profilaxis (Prep).

Prep tablets are highly effective but it can be difficult to take them every day.

According to the most recent data for 2023, around 39.9 million people in the World Health Organization African region are living with HIV, 65%of them, for 2023, according to recent data.

And the United Nations programs on WHO, Global Fund and HIV and AIDS (UNADS) are all working on strategies to eliminate HIV epidemic by 2030, including improving access to drugs such as prep.

Annual dose

For testing, 40 people without HIV were injected into the muscles with Lakpavir, which had no major side effects or safety concerns.

And after 56 weeks, the drug was still detectable in their body.

Future tests should include more diverse participants, the researchers told 2025 Conference on retrovius and opportunistic infections,

But he said: “The annual dose of the Lenakpavir has the ability to further reduce the current obstacles, which grows rapidly, and, therefore, is ready to prepare the scalability of the prep.”

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