AI Article Synopsis

  • Preventing HIV transmission is essential to ending the HIV epidemic, and effective PrEP has been available since 2012, aiming to help those at highest risk.
  • A study compared the demographics of nearly 15,000 PrEP users with over 3,500 newly diagnosed HIV cases to evaluate who was receiving PrEP and identify gaps in access to care.
  • The findings revealed disparities in PrEP prescriptions, with older, non-Black males more likely to receive it, and emphasized the need for targeted programs to reach underrepresented populations, particularly young people, women, Black individuals, and intravenous drug users.

Article Abstract

Preventing HIV transmission is a crucial step in ending the HIV epidemic. Safe and effective pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has been available in the United States since 2012. We set out to determine if persons at greatest risk for HIV acquisition were receiving HIV PrEP. HIV-negative individuals from the Observational Pharmaco-Epidemiology Research & Analysis (OPERA) cohort who were prescribed daily PrEP were contrasted with newly diagnosed HIV persons without PrEP use between July 16, 2012 and October 31, 2020 to determine if the PrEP prescriptions reached the populations who were seroconverting. Poisson regression was used to estimate incidence rates of seroconversion to HIV among PrEP initiators, as well as new diagnoses of sexually transmitted infections among both the PrEP group and the newly HIV+ group. Out of the 14,598 PrEP users and 3558 persons newly diagnosed with HIV in OPERA, demographics varied widely. Older individuals, those of non-Black race, men, nonintravenous (IV) drug users, and those with commercial insurance were proportionally overrepresented among those prescribed PrEP compared to persons newly diagnosed with HIV during the same time period. Over 82% of new HIV+ individuals received care in the southern United States compared to only 45% of PrEP users. Seroconversion to HIV among PrEP users was generally uncommon, although more frequent among those who identified as Black individuals, especially in the 13-25 years old age range. In conclusion, providers need innovative programs to better identify, educate, and link those at greatest risk of HIV acquisition, especially young people, women, Black individuals, and IV drug users, to PrEP.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/apc.2021.0064DOI Listing

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