Antiretroviral drugs can prevent transmission of HIV from an infected sexual partner to an uninfected one, by suppressing viral replication. We found one randomised controlled trial and seven observational studies that examined this question. Overall we found that in couples in which the infected partner was being treated with antiretroviral drugs the uninfected partners had, at worst, more than three-times lower risk of being infected than in couples where the infected partner was not receiving treatment. Since the World Health Organization (WHO) already recommends antiretroviral treatment for all persons with ≤350 CD4 cells/µL, we also examined studies that had looked at partners with CD4 counts higher than this level. We found that there is strong evidence that in this group HIV was less likely to be transmitted to uninfected partners from treated infected partners than from untreated infected partners.
Antiretroviral therapy for prevention of HIV transmission in HIV-discordant couples
Published Online:
February 15, 2012
Health topics:
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