Clinical Inquiries

Is event-driven PrEP dosing for HIV as effective as daily dosing?

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EVIDENCE-BASED ANSWER:

Probably, although there are no head-to-head trials comparing the 2 dosing regimens. Event-driven pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) dosing reduces HIV conversion by 86% compared to placebo (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, large randomized controlled trial [RCT]). Daily PrEP reduces HIV conversion by 44% to 86% (SOR: B, based on open-­label RCTs).

Event-driven PrEP regimens may be associated with lower adherence when compared with daily PrEP regimens (average of 70% for event-driven PrEP vs average of 92% for daily PrEP) (SOR: B, based on open-label and cohort trials). Event-driven PrEP regimens have lower medication costs, and they are associated with no difference in the rate of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) (SOR: B, based on prospective cohort studies). Patients may prefer them to daily regimens (75% choose event-driven PrEP vs 25% choose daily PrEP) (SOR: B, based on the preponderance of prospective cohort studies with conflicting results).


 

References

EVIDENCE SUMMARY

Event-driven PrEP is effective for prevention of HIV transmission

An RCT evaluating the effectiveness of event-driven PrEP in 400 patients at high risk for HIV found that it reduced HIV incidence by 86% compared to placebo. Researchers recruited HIV-negative men or transgender women who had sex with men, who’d had condomless anal sex with at least 2 partners in the previous 6 months, and followed them for a median of 9.3 months for HIV acquisition.1

Patients randomized to ­event-driven PrEP took tenofovir-emtricitabine (300-200 mg) on the following schedule: 2 pills 2 to 24 hours before intercourse (or 1 pill if they had taken it within the past week), followed by a third pill 24 hours later, and a fourth pill 24 hours after that. When patients had multiple consecutive episodes of intercourse, daily use was continued until 2 days after the last episode. Patients in the control group took placebo pills.1

Event-driven PrEP reduced HIV incidence vs placebo (2 infections vs 14 infections; 0.91 vs 6.6 per 100 person-years; relative risk [RR] = 0.86; P = .002). PrEP produced more gastrointestinal (14% vs 5%; P = .002) and renal (18% vs 10%; P = .03) adverse effects than placebo. Participants took a median of 15 pills per month.1

A post-hoc analysis of the above study, evaluating 270 patients, found that event-driven PrEP reduced HIV incidence by 100% during periods of less frequent sexual encounters. Selected participants had a median of 5 sexual encounters per month (range, 2-10), used a median of 9.5 pills per month (range, 6-13), and represented 134 person-years of follow-up. No HIV infections (0 per 100 person-years; 95% CI, 0-5; P = .013) were diagnosed in the PrEP group and 6 HIV infections (9.2 per 100 person-years; 95% CI, 3.4-20.1) were diagnosed in the placebo group, with a relative reduction of HIV incidence of 100% (95% CI, 39-100).2

For comparison, 2 large open-label trials evaluating daily PrEP found that it reduced HIV incidence by 44%3 and 86%4 vs placebo.

In 2019, the USPSTF published a recommendation that clinicians offer PrEP with effective antiretroviral therapy to patients at high risk for HIV acquisition.

Adherence is better with daily PrEPthan event-driven PrEP

Three prospective cohort trials evaluated PrEP adherence (extent that participants were taking PrEP at the time of sexual encounters) with different dosing regimens and found that event-driven PrEP tended to have lower adherence than daily PrEP. An open-­label trial in Bangkok and Harlem (New York City) randomized 357 at-risk patients to 1 of 3 regimens: event-driven (1 tablet before and after sex), time-driven (1 tablet twice weekly with a postsex dose), and daily. Overall, patients with event-driven PrEP had lower adherence than those with daily PrEP (67% event-driven vs 97% daily; P < 0.0001).5

Continue to: In an open-label...

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Evidence-based answers from the Family Physicians Inquiries Network

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