Image:  Arek Socha from Pixabay
Image: Arek Socha from Pixabay

Vaginal bacteria can deactivate HIV drugs

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Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Experimental study: At least one thing in the experiment was changed to see if it had an impact on the subjects (often people or animals) – eg: changing the amount of time mice spend on an exercise wheel to find out what impact it has on weight loss.

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US researchers have found that a reason that anti-HIV prophylactic drugs often aren’t as effective in women is due to some vaginal bacteria breaking down the drugs. Testing vaginal fluids from women with or without the common condition bacterial vaginosis (which results in itching and an increased likelihood of sexually transmitted infections) showed that bacteria associated with this condition are responsible for deactivating HIV drugs. The research highlights the need to develop better treatments for vaginal diseases and studies that improve women’s health.

Journal/conference: PLOS Pathogens

Link to research (DOI): 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009024

Organisation/s: University of Minnesota, USA

Funder: This study was supported by National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (R01DK112254); National Institute on Drug Abuse (1DP1DA037979091) ; National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (5R01Al138718-02); National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (R0101AI138718) and Miami Women’s Interagency HIV Infection Study (WIHS) [U01AI103397]. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Media release

From: PLOS

How the vaginal microbiome may affect HIV prevention

Healthy Lactobacillus bacteria in the vagina are critical for women’s health, but the accumulation of additional bacterial genera can imbalance the vaginal ecosystem.  Such an imbalance may result in bacterial metabolism of drugs designed to prevent HIVinfection, thereby decreasing their effectiveness and enhancing risks to women, according to a study published December 3, 2020 in the open-access journal PLOS Pathogens by Dr. Nichole Klatt of the University of Minnesota, and colleagues.

With no effective vaccine for HIV, alternative strategies such as pre-exposure prophylactic (PrEP) drugs are necessary to prevent transmission. PrEP drugs are highly effective in preventing the acquisition of HIV infection in men, but they are much less effective at preventing HIV infection in women. Recent evidence demonstrates that vaginal microbial communities are associated with increased HIV acquisition risk and may impact PrEP efficacy. To better design and conduct clinical studies assessing HIVprevention in women, it is essential to understand how microbes in the female reproductive tract affect therapeutic drug levels.

In the new study, Klatt and her colleagues investigated how vaginal bacteria alter PrEP drug levels and impact HIV infection rates using cervicovaginal lavage samples from women with and without bacterial vaginosis (BV) – a highly common syndrome in women that is caused by bacteria that can induce itching, discharge and discomfort, and has been associated with increased sexually transmitted infections and negative reproductive tract outcomes in women. However, current treatments for BV frequently fail and recurrence is common. The researchers found that bacteria associated with BV - but not healthy Lactobacillus bacteria - can metabolize PrEP drugs and maypotentially reduce PrEP efficacy due to reduced levels of available preventative drug. According to the authors, better measurements and interventions for bacterial vaginosis will be critical for improving the efficacy of HIV prevention efforts in women.

Dr. Klatt highlights, “women’s health, and factors that contribute to health and disease prevention in women are grossly under studied. This study demonstrates the critical need to develop better treatments for bacterial vaginosis, and in general, to promote more studies of women’s health.”

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