Second Study Affirms Undetectable HIV Positive Men Cannot Transmit the Virus

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An International study of gay couples reports no transmissions of the virus from an HIV-positive partner who is undetectable on treatment.

The study, called “Opposites Attract,” included 343 gay couples, where one partner had HIV and the other did not, and found not a single case of HIV transmission despite 16,889 acts of condomless anal sex.

The HIV-positive partners in the “Opposites Attract” study had a so-called “undetectable viral load” 98% of the time. An undetectable viral load means the HIV virus is still present in the infected person, but that treatment of it has suppressed it to such a level that it can’t be detected by a standard test.

Information about the study was released today at the International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Science in Paris. In a statement, NAM (the National AIDS Manual) quoted Professor Andrew Grulich of the Kirby Institute who was the chief investigator on the study: “Our data add to previous studies which show that there has never been a recorded case of HIV transmission from an HIV-positive person to their HIV-negative sexual partner when the HIV-positive partner had undetectable viral load.”

NAM Executive Director Matthew Hodson, commented, “In terms of HIV prevention, if condom use is safer sex, then sex with someone who has maintained an undetectable viral load is even safer sex.”

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The study recruited and followed-up gay couples at clinics in Australia, Thailand and Brazil.

A detailed analysis of the research findings is available on NAM’s website, www.aidsmap.com, which is the official online scientific news reporter for the IAS Conference on HIV Science.

“The evidence from Opposites Attract adds to the evidence from the PARTNER study that HIV-positive people on effective HIV treatment that fully suppresses their virus cannot transmit their infection through sex,” NAM said, citing an earlier study http://i-base.info/qa-on-the-partner-study/ involving both gay and straight couples whose final results were released last year. “Taken together, the two studies have not found a single case of HIV transmission in nearly 40,000 acts of condomless anal sex between gay men.

“This new data adds further strength to the ‘U=U’ (Undetectable equals Untransmittable) tagline of the Prevention Access Campaign, whose consensus statement has been signed by both NAM and the International AIDS Society.

The studies also found that if the positive partner is on successful treatment, even having another sexually transmitted infection does not increase the risk of HIV being transmitted, NAM reported. Significant numbers of participants in both studies had a sexually transmitted infection at some point.

“Sexual position also made no difference even though when viral load is not suppressed and condoms are not used, transmission is 10 to 20 times more likely if the HIV-positive partner is the ‘top’ rather than the ‘bottom’ .“

“We’ve known for many years that HIV treatment, as well as saving lives, also plays a role in reducing transmission risk, said NAM’s Hodson. “Our confidence that those of us with HIV are not a risk to our sexual partners is crucial to the transformation we have seen in HIV since the introduction of effective treatment.”

“For many years, those of us with diagnosed HIV have had to live with the idea that our bodies are dangerous. This has had a profound emotional impact on many people. It is wonderful to consider what this news can mean to people with HIV who are too scared to have sex in case they pass their virus on, or to those in relationships with HIV-positive people whose sexual pleasure has been hampered by fear.

“The preventative impact of effective HIV treatment underlines the importance of expanding access to treatment and of improving treatment uptake and adherence for all people living with HIV worldwide.”

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