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Morning Briefing

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Friday, May 11 2012

FDA Panel Recommends Approval Of Truvada As HIV Prevention Tool

"In a move that could lead to a new milestone for treatment in the evolution of the worldwide AIDS epidemic," a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) panel on Thursday recommended Gilead Sciences' antiretroviral drug Truvada be approved for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent HIV among healthy people at risk of contracting the virus, Reuters reports, noting the drug is already approved to treat HIV infection (Morgan, 5/10). "The panel voted 19-3 to approve the drug for use in gay men and 19-2, with one member abstaining, for heterosexual couples in which one person is HIV-negative," according to the Wall Street Journal (Dooren, 5/10). "The recommendation is the first time that government advisers have advocated giving antiviral medicine to healthy people who might be exposed through sexual activity to the virus that causes AIDS," the New York Times writes (Grady, 5/10). Though the FDA is not required to follow the panel's advice, it usually does, and "[a] final decision is expected by June 15," the Associated Press/Fox News reports (5/11).
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