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Ethics in a new era Microbicides 2012 Preconference Bridget Haire Ethical issues in research • Balance of risks of benefits • Fairness • Consent – Voluntary – Sufficient understanding – No coercion • Promote justice, avoid exploitation – Reasonable likelihood that the trial community will eventually derive benefit – Risks not disproportionate or unreasonable Community role in ethical research process • Make the research better • Get the best deal possible for participants* and the local community (risk/benefit balance, fairness, consent, no exploitation) • Communicate effectively with research team about issues that affect the research process, outcomes and participants • Communicate with and listen to the wider community about the research What’s the new era? • Positive trial results: can we still use placebos? • Adherence as critical: supporting it, measuring it, communicating honestly about it • ‘Futility’ results (FemPrEP, Voice) – Stopping rules: when should a trial be stopped for futility? – Are IIB trials still useful? New biomedical intervention strategies Effect size (CI) Study Prime-boost HIV Vaccine (Thai RV144) 1% tenofovir gel 1% tenofovir (Caprisa 004, Karim etgel al.) (Caprisa 004,oral-PrEP Karim et al.) in MSM TDF/FTC 31% (1, 51) 39% (6, 60) 44% (15, 63) (iPrEx, Grant et al 2010) Medical male circumcision (MMC) (Orange Farm, Rakai, Kisumu) TDF/FTC oral-PrEP in heterosexuals (TDF2, CDC) TDF oral-PrEP in serodiscordant 57% (42, 68) 63% (22, 83)* 62% (34, 78)* Partner (Partners PrEP) 73% (49, 85)* TDF/FTC oral-PrEP in serodiscordant Partner (Partners PrEP) 96% (82, 99)* Immediate ART for positive Partners (HPTN052) 0% 10 Slide: Robin Shattock IAS Plenary Rome 2011 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100% Efficacy When should new interventions be added to prevention package? • If the method been recommended by international bodies or adopted nationally • But also if: – the evidence is strong AND – the intervention has shown efficacy in the relevant population; AND – if provision is feasible. If the evidence is strong… • Statistically significant (P = <0.05) • Effect size is substantial (lowest end of the confidence interval needs to big enough to have an impact) • More than one trial, or one trial with a very strong result • Not entirely black and white, and subject to arguments about specific situations Relevant populations • Route of exposure (vagina/penis, rectum, intravenous) • Might extrapolation be reasonable in some instances? Is provision feasible? • What are the barriers – regulatory, costassociated, manufacturing issues? • Cost associated issues might be resolvable through drug donations • Regulatory issues may be resolvable through advocacy (or maybe not) • Manufacturing issues may be impossible to solve short-term When should a new intervention not be added? • When there are safety issues regarding drugdrug interactions • When the addition of a new intervention would compromise the ability of the trial to answer the relevant question • (Is the trial addressing a relevant question?) Grey areas • Ipergay- French trial of PrEP in gay men comparing intermittent PrEP with placebo • Issues – Continuous PrEP shown modestly effective in iPrEX (44%, but higher in good adherers) – Proof-of-concept in Partners PrEP and TNF2 (Botswana), though with penile exposure – BUT not approved for prevention (yet) anywhere ASPIRE – more grey • Vaginal ring that delivers the ARV dapivrine • Ph III trial of 3476 randomised to active ring or ring with placebo • Positive trial results that should be considered HPTN052 (early treatment of positive partner), CAPRISA 004 (tenofovir gel) Partners PrEP, TNF 2 (PrEP) • Negative results FemPrEP, VOICE Vaginal rings Issue in ASPIRE • PrEP could not be added to both arms, due to potential drug/drug interactions • Head-to-head against PrEP or tenofovir gel? • Early treatment offer for HIV positive partners of participants (applying HPTN052 lessons)? IIB Trials/Stopping rules • Both FemPrEP and VOICE were designed so that if a product was ineffective at certain time points, that arm of the trial was stopped • Is this useful? • Smaller trials have less power to give an answer • Should trials be stopped for futility? Ethics sessions at M2012 • Standard of Prevention – Monday 11am • Social and ethical issue in HIV Prevention – Monday 2 pm • Beyond the Trial: ethical and operational challenges for post-trial access– Wednesday 11am