HIV Prevention Trials Network
The HIV Prevention Trials Network is a worldwide collaborative clinical trials network that brings together investigators, ethicists, community and other partners to develop and test the safety and efficacy of interventions designed to prevent the acquisition and transmission of HIV. HPTN studies evaluate new HIV prevention interventions and strategies in populations and geographical regions that bear a disproportionate burden of infection. The HPTN is committed to the highest ethical standards for its clinical trials and recognizes the importance of community engagement in all phases of the research process.
The HPTN was established in 2000, building on the work of the HIV Network for Prevention Trials. HPTN’s Leadership and Operations Center is based at FHI 360, Durham, NC. Its is at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD and Statistical and Data Management Center is housed within the at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Washington. The , part of the SDMC, is a collaboration between the Department of Infectious Diseases Epidemiology at Imperial College London, UK, and SCHARP.
HPTN receives funding from three NIH institutes: the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Snapshot
- More than 50 trials ongoing or completed
- 161,000+ study participants enrolled and evaluated
- Over 85 clinical research sites in 19 countries
- 300+ publications
Mission statement
Leadership
The HPTN leadership group is a subset of the Executive Committee. The EC includes investigators from the Clinical Trials Units, the Leadership and Operations Center, the Statistical and Data Management Center, the Laboratory Center, Community representatives, National Institutes of Health representatives, and other individuals with expertise in HPTN scientific research areas.The EC, under the direction of HPTN Principal Investigators Myron Cohen, MD, and Wafaa El-Sadr, MD, MPH, MPA, in conjunction with the NIH, sets the research priorities of the HPTN and directs its scientific agenda.
Network groups and committees
The HPTN is a global network of investigators from Clinical Trials Units, Leadership and Operations Center which includes recognized experts in HIV prevention, leadership partners from the network Laboratory Center and Statistical and Data Management Center and various working groups and committees charged with the scientific management and operational support of the network.The EC Chair recommends, and the full EC approves, chair and membership of the HPTN committees. Committee members serve for the duration of the cooperative agreement, and chairs serve three-year terms unless otherwise specified. Terms of committee chairs may be extended with the approval of the EC Chair. In addition to the scientific committees and working groups, there are five key standing Network oversight and operations committees: Science Review Committee, Study Monitoring Committee, Manuscript Review Committee, Performance Evaluation Committee, and Policies and Procedures Group.
Research agenda
HPTN studies strive to prevent HIV infection through the use of antiretroviral drugs ; interventions for substance abuse, particularly injection drug use; behavioral risk reduction interventions and structural interventions.HPTN research studies are developed by protocol teams that include CTU investigators and recognized experts in HIV prevention. As study protocols are developed, they undergo a rigorous intra- and extra-Network review process that ensures compliance with current ethical guidelines and regulatory procedures.
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) strategies
Antiviral Drugs- is a Phase III study comparing the efficacy and safety of long-acting injectable cabotegravir to Truvada® for prevention of HIV acquisition in women in Botswana, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa, Swaziland, Uganda and Zimbabwe.
- is a Phase IIb/III study comparing the efficacy and safety of long-acting injectable cabotegravir to Truvada® for prevention of HIV acquisition in cisgender MSM and transgender women who have sex with men in Argentina, Brazil, Peru, South Africa, Thailand, the United States and Vietnam. The study showed that CAB LA lowered HIV incidence among cisgender men and transgender women who have sex with men.
- was a Phase IV sub-Saharan-based research study designed to assess the number of and characteristics of young women who accept versus decline pre-exposure prophylaxis at enrollment. The study compared adherence to PrEP between women who are randomized to receive standard adherence support and those receiving enhanced adherence support. HPTN 082 data show pre-exposure prophylaxis use was high but waned after three months among the young African women enrolled in the study.
- is a Phase IIa study helping determine whether injectable cabotegravir could be used for PrEP in people at greater risk of acquiring HIV.
- is a Phase II study designed to find out if a new form of the drug rilpivirine is safe and acceptable for use as HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis.
- is a Phase IV demonstration study see if Black men who have sex with men are willing to use Truvada®, a daily pill for pre-exposure prophylaxis.
- was a Phase II study designed to learn more about the safety and acceptability of oral maraviroc in at-risk HIV uninfected men who have sex with men and in at-risk HIV uninfected women.
- HPTN 052 was a Phase III landmark study proving viral suppression through antiretroviral therapy can prevent HIV transmission. Based on the study’s findings, the World Health Organization recommended antiretroviral treatment be offered to all people living with HIV, regardless of CD4 count. Science named this study the 2011 "Breakthrough of the Year".
The HPTN and the HIV Vaccine Trials Network are studying monoclonal antibodies that may protect people from HIV infection. These studies will guide the development of new ways to prevent HIV. They will also guide future vaccine development that could help to end HIV.
- is an antiretroviral analytical treatment interruption study to assess immunologic and virologic responses in participants who received VRC01 or placebo and became HIV-infected during .
- is an antiretroviral analytical treatment interruption study to assess immunologic and virologic responses in participants who initiated antiretroviral therapy in early HIV infection after having received VRC01 or placebo in .
- is a Phase I clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and antiviral activity of combinations of monoclonal antibodies PGT121, PGDM1400, 10-1074, and VRC07-523LS administered via intravenous infusion in healthy, HIV-uninfected adult participants
- is a Phase I clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and functional activity of a tri-specific antibody, SAR441236, in healthy, HIV-1–uninfected adult participants.
- is a Phase I study evaluating the safety and serum concentrations of a human monoclonal antibody, VRC-HIVMAB075-00-AB, administered in multiple doses and routes to healthy, HIV-uninfected adults in Switzerland and the United States.
- , also known as Antibody Mediated Prevention, is a Phase IIb study evaluating the safety and efficacy of VRC01, a broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibody, in reducing acquisition of HIV-1 infection among men and transgender persons who have sex with men in Brazil, Peru, Switzerland and the United States.
- , also known as Antibody Mediated Prevention, is a Phase IIb study evaluating the safety and efficacy of VRC01, a broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibody, in reducing the acquisition of HIV-1 infection among sexually active women in sub-Saharan Africa.
Integrated strategies
- was a US-based research study designed to develop and determine the effectiveness of a combined HIV prevention strategy that includes a method to identify, recruit, and link men who have sex with men to HIV care and an intervention to help HIV-infected MSM achieve and maintain viral suppression. Findings from HPTN 078 show engaging disenfranchised men who have sex with men living with HIV in the U.S. is possible, but the best way to help them achieve and maintain viral suppression is not yet known.
- was an observational study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of HIV prevention research among men who have sex with men and transgender women in three countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Findings from the study showed participants were at an alarming risk for getting HIV. The incidence among study participants was substantially higher than the estimated incidence among heterosexual men and women in the general population in the same countries.
- was a Phase III study aimed to determine the feasibility of a future trial that would assess whether an integrated intervention combining psychosocial counseling and supported referrals for antiretroviral therapy at any CD4 cell count and substance use treatment for HIV-infected people who inject drugs would reduce HIV transmission to HIV-uninfected injection partners, as compared to routine care dictated by national guidelines for HIV-infected PWID. At 52 weeks from enrollment, participants in the intervention arm nearly doubled their antiretroviral therapy usage, viral suppression and medication-assisted treatment usage compared to the standard of care arm. Mortality was also reduced by more than half with the intervention.
- Population Effects of Antiretroviral Therapy to Reduce HIV Transmission was a research study that examined the impact of a package of HIV prevention interventions on community-level HIV incidence. The prevention interventions included universal voluntary HIV counseling and testing provided at household level, linkage of HIV infected individuals to care and early initiation of antiretroviral therapy for all those testing HIV-positive. The study was conducted in 21 communities in the Western Cape of South Africa, and in Zambia. Findings show delivery of an HIV prevention strategy that includes offering in-home HIV testing to everyone, with immediate referral to HIV care, and treatment for people living with HIV based on prevailing in-country guidelines, can substantially reduce new HIV infections. Findings from HPTN 071 show delivery of an HIV prevention strategy that includes offering in-home HIV testing to everyone, with immediate referral to HIV care, and treatment for people living with HIV based on prevailing in-country guidelines, can substantially reduce new HIV infections. According to projections from mathematical modelling and cost-effectiveness analyses, continuation of community-wide HIV testing and prompt initiation of treatment as delivered in the HPTN 071 study in South Africa and Zambia could lead to substantial reductions in new HIV cases, be cost-effective, and help to achieve the UNAIDS 2030 targets.
Scholars program
Scholars:
- Develop a research project using data from a completed or ongoing HPTN HIV prevention study and complete their scholarship project within the program cycle
- Present the findings of their project at the HPTN Annual Meeting and submit a manuscript at the end of the scholarship cycle
- Become knowledgeable of the process of doing research in NIH-funded HIV networks, and have the opportunity to build their research networks within the context of the HPTN