Publications by authors named "Polly Harrison"

Objective: To provide researchers, product sponsors, drug regulators, and funding organizations with a convenient reference regarding regulatory guidance for microbicide development and licensure.

Methods: WHO and other leading agencies in the microbicide field sponsored a series of technical consultations over the past decade that engaged a wide range of international experts in regional settings of primary relevance for microbicide development, testing, and eventual use. This article summarizes the results of those consultations against the ever-changing background of HIV prevention.

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Adherence optimization and measurement have emerged as critically challenging issues for clinical trials of topical microbicides. Although microbicide trials have routinely collected adherence data, their utilization in trial design, implementation, and interpretation has been inconsistent. Drawing on data-driven presentations from several focused meetings, this paper synthesizes lessons from past microbicide trials and provides recommendations for future trials of microbicide and other HIV prevention technologies.

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The conference on which this supplement reports was organized to bring together microbicide researchers with researchers in the areas of drug prophylaxis and therapeutics development. The goal of session 1 was to share methods used to validate markers of disease, elucidate the logic used to substantiate the performance of those markers, and identify ways to translate this experience into practical steps for developing microbicides. The experiences discussed ranged from de novo discovery of new therapeutics to qualification of biomarkers across all stages of development, and covered the complexity of biomarker identification, use, and assessment in the clinical areas of cancer and infectious disease.

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Background: Microbicides for HIV/sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention are still in development. Microbicide acceptability studies have thus focused on soliciting input from individuals about hypothetical products using traditional epidemiological and behavioral research methodologies. Here, we integrate a well-established market research method, conjoint analysis, with more traditional epidemiological and behavioral research to examine potential users' preferences for different microbicide formulations.

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With growing recognition of the potential value of microbicides for HIV/STI prevention, the importance of the acceptability of this brand-new technology has been widely acknowledged. We review the current body of microbicide acceptability research, characterize the limitations in assessment approaches, and suggest strategies for improvement. Electronic databases and abstracts of recent meetings were searched for acceptability data regarding vaginal and rectal products that may be used for HIV prevention.

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As the human immunodeficiency virus and sexually transmitted disease epidemics advance relentlessly, it is clear that an armamentarium of therapeutic and preventive methods will be essential to their containment. Topical microbicides--self-administered prophylactic agents applied to the vagina or rectum in various formulations--could be a crucial addition to that necessary armamentarium. This article provides an update on the dramatically broadening array of approaches being pursued in microbicide research and development and identifies critical challenges to progress.

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