- Anderson, Peter L;
- Glidden, David V;
- Liu, Albert;
- Buchbinder, Susan;
- Lama, Javier R;
- Guanira, Juan Vicente;
- McMahan, Vanessa;
- Bushman, Lane R;
- Casapía, Martín;
- Montoya-Herrera, Orlando;
- Veloso, Valdilea G;
- Mayer, Kenneth H;
- Chariyalertsak, Suwat;
- Schechter, Mauro;
- Bekker, Linda-Gail;
- Kallás, Esper Georges;
- Grant, Robert M;
- Team, For the iPrEx Study
Drug concentrations associated with protection from HIV-1 acquisition have not been determined. We evaluated drug concentrations among men who have sex with men in a substudy of the iPrEx trial (1). In this randomized placebo-controlled trial, daily oral doses of emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate were used as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in men who have sex with men. Drug was detected less frequently in blood plasma and in viable cryopreserved peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in HIV-infected cases at the visit when HIV was first discovered compared with controls at the matched time point of the study (8% versus 44%; P < 0.001) and in the 90 days before that visit (11% versus 51%; P < 0.001). An intracellular concentration of the active form of tenofovir, tenofovir-diphosphate (TFV-DP), of 16 fmol per million PBMCs was associated with a 90% reduction in HIV acquisition relative to the placebo arm. Directly observed dosing in a separate study, the STRAND trial, yielded TFV-DP concentrations that, when analyzed according to the iPrEx model, corresponded to an HIV-1 risk reduction of 76% for two doses per week, 96% for four doses per week, and 99% for seven doses per week. Prophylactic benefits were observed over a range of doses and drug concentrations, suggesting ways to optimize PrEP regimens for this population.