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FDA approves powerful HIV drug that nearly eliminated spread in clinical trials

FDA approves powerful HIV drug that nearly eliminated spread in clinical trials

Yahoo2 days ago

The Food and Drug Administration has approved a highly effective new HIV-prevention medication, Gilead Sciences reported Wednesday. In clinical trials, the drug nearly eliminated HIV's spread among people given an injection every six months.
Called Yeztugo, the highly effective drug has inspired feverish anticipation among advocates for HIV prevention. The hope is the medication could accelerate the stubbornly slow decline of HIV transmission in the United States.
'This is the single best opportunity in 44 years of HIV prevention,' said Mitchell Warren, executive director of the HIV advocacy nonprofit group AVAC.
Yeztugo (generic name lenacapavir), which is given by health care workers in clinics, is significantly more effective than the existing oral HIV-prevention drugs, experts said, because it appears to address the challenges of sticking to a daily pill regimen for people who are at high risk of HIV.
Gilead's chairman and CEO, Daniel O'Day, suggested in a statement Wednesday that the drug could 'end the HIV epidemic once and for all.'
It was approved after astounding results in Gilead's large clinical trials of the drug. The trials randomly assigned people at risk of HIV to receive either lenacapavir injections every six months or daily Truvada, a pill form of pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP. Among gay and bisexual men and transgender people, the Yeztugo group had an 89% lower HIV rate than a group taking Truvada and a 96% lower rate than Gilead estimated would have been expected absent any PrEP.
In a similar trial among cisgender women in sub-Saharan Africa, no one who received Yeztugo contracted HIV.
The shot is the first in a new class of antiretrovirals which block HIV from infecting and making new copies of itself inside the immune cells it targets. Lenacapavir was first approved in 2022, under the brand name Sunleca, for use with other medications to treat highly drug resistant strains of the virus.
All forms of PrEP work in the same way: If enough of the drug is present in the body when a person is exposed to HIV, it's highly effective at preventing the virus from taking hold and establishing a lifelong infection. Lenacapavir is so long-acting, it only needs to be injected twice a year.
However, Yeztugo's use as PrEP against HIV emerges into a political climate that experts warn could derail progress against the virus' spread. The Trump administration's recent sweeping cancellations of research grants and its severe cuts to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's staffing have dramatically affected the HIV-prevention field in particular. HIV experts are concerned that Yeztugo's full potential might remain unrealized.
Priced at $14,109 per injection, or $2,352 per month, Yeztugo's cost could be another hurdle.
Health insurers, at least in the near term, might decline to cover the shots in favor of other forms of PrEP, including the cheaper generic version of Truvada pills, which cost as little as $30 per month. Or insurers might impose higher copays for lenacapavir, said Elizabeth Kaplan, director of health care access at Harvard Law School's Health Law and Policy Clinic.
A pending Supreme Court decision concerning a pillar of the Affordable Care Act could also be a barrier to insurance coverage for medications that prevent HIV. The ACA, or Obamacare, mandates no-cost coverage for certain preventive interventions like PrEP.
A Gilead spokesperson said that within two days from Yeztugo's approval, people should be able to start asking health care providers for the drug. However, putting aside the question of whether insurance will cover the drug, it could take up to two months for people to actually receive their first injection.
Older forms of PrEP have had mixed success.
Truvada, also made by Gilead, was the first approved PrEP drug in 2012, followed by a similar oral medication from the company, Descovy, in 2019.
They have steadily gained popularity among gay and bisexual men, who, according to the CDC, account for 7 in 10 new HIV cases and comprise the overwhelming share of PrEP users.
However, considering how much higher the HIV rate is among Black and Latino gay men compared with their white peers, PrEP use among men of color has remained disproportionately low. Experts believe PrEP has most likely hastened HIV's considerable decline among white gay and bisexual men, but the HIV rate among Black and Latino gay and bisexual men has persisted at markedly high rates. In addition, when they are prescribed PrEP, Black gay men are less likely to take the pill regimen as prescribed.
When they are taken daily, Truvada and Descovy each slash HIV risk by at least 99%. But inconsistent use diminishes PrEP's effectiveness.
In late 2021, ViiV Healthcare's Apretude was approved as an injectable PrEP given every two months.
Despite being much more effective than Truvada at lowering HIV cases across a population of gay and bisexual men and transgender women in a major clinical trial, Apretude has gained scant traction until recently. About 21,000 people are taking it, ViiV reported. It's possible that, in part, people have been alienated by the requirement to visit a clinic every two months for Apretude, instead of every three months for an oral PrEP prescription.
The twice-yearly injection offers an alternative for people who won't or have trouble remembering to take a pill every day, reducing the number of required annual clinic visits from four to two.
According to CDC estimates, during the decade after PrEP's debut, the annual HIV transmission rate declined by only 17%, from 38,300 cases in 2012 to 31,800 cases in 2022. Much of the decline occurred since 2018, with case numbers falling by 12% during that four-year period.
In 2019, the Trump administration launched the Ending the HIV Epidemic, or EHE, initiative, which has since targeted nearly $3 billion in new spending to combat HIV, including by promoting PrEP, in 48 hot-spot counties in particular. The target jurisdictions had a swifter 21% decline in estimated HIV transmissions from 2018 to 2022.
In a study published in October, CDC investigators reported that PrEP use has risen steadily since 2014 and that about 200,000 people were receiving some form of it during any month of 2023.
But that is only a small fraction of the 1.5 million gay and bisexual men who are good PrEP candidates, according to estimates in a new CDC study published in May.
The crucial question is whether a critical mass of people who otherwise wouldn't have stuck to an oral PrEP regimen can routinely be provided lenacapavir while they are at risk of HIV.
Dr. Susanne Doblecki-Lewis, chief of the division of infectious diseases at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, is the site principal investigator for the lenacapavir clinical trial in gay men and a separate trial in people who inject drugs. She said lenacapavir could mitigate HIV-related racial disparities, provided it is made 'available easily and at low or no cost to people who can benefit from it who are uninsured or underinsured.'
But, she said, 'if there are barriers, like complicated prior authorizations or high copays that will prevent people from easily starting it, we could see disparities just get worse.'
The Trump administration's 2026 budget request seeks a $1.5 billion, or 35%, cut for domestic HIV funding. That includes shuttering the CDC's $794 million HIV-prevention division, although some remnants of it are apparently meant to be folded into a new federal health department, along with a maintained $220 million in EHE funding.
Much of the CDC's HIV-prevention and -surveillance budget is distributed in grants to state and local health departments and nonprofit organizations. Severe federal budget cuts would most likely hobble those entities' efforts to educate at-risk populations and doctors about lenacapavir and provide services to facilitate its use.
Another hurdle for prescribers is whether they can ensure that people at risk of HIV return for lenacapavir shots twice yearly. Two recent studies, one published in May and another presented at a conference in March, found that fewer than half of oral PrEP users stay on it for six months or longer.
Historically, the National Institutes of Health has funded research to help implement new forms of PrEP, examining weak spots and devising interventions. But the Trump administration's campaign to slash NIH spending has had a severe impact on HIV research, including PrEP, according to a dossier of canceled grants compiled by a Harvard researcher.
A federal judge ruled Monday that some such NIH grant terminations were 'arbitrary and capricious' and 'void and illegal.' But the temporary win for researchers doesn't mean the NIH under Trump will necessarily become newly hospitable to grant proposals concerning PrEP implementation.
Johanna Mercier, Gilead's chief commercial officer, said in an interview this month that the company has been pushing insurers to cover lenacapavir. She expressed optimism for ultimately widespread coverage of the drug.
Gilead will cover up to $7,200 annually in out-of-pocket costs for insured people receiving Yeztugo. And its patient assistance program will provide it free to low-income uninsured people. There is otherwise a patchwork system nationally that can often aid the uninsured in covering the required clinic visits and lab tests.
Tristan Schukraft, CEO of the popular PrEP-focused telehealth company Mistr, said it intends to begin offering the drug immediately through its storefronts in seven major urban gay neighborhoods. The company has also formed partnerships with a nationwide network of community-based clinics that can provide the shots, including to people without insurance.
'We're ready,' Schukraft said.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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Lava fountains over 1,000 feet high shoot from Hawaii's Kilauea volcano
Lava fountains over 1,000 feet high shoot from Hawaii's Kilauea volcano

CBS News

time31 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Lava fountains over 1,000 feet high shoot from Hawaii's Kilauea volcano

Hawaii's Kilauea volcano sent jets of lava shooting over 1,000 feet into the air early Friday morning, marking another explosive episode for the active volcano. The volcanic activity began at 11:30 p.m. local time Thursday, according to the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, which is operated by the U.S. Geological Survey. At first, the activity was "small, sporadic spattering" and lava outflows, the observatory said. But as time went on, the activity "continued to increase in intensity." By 1:40 a.m. Friday, the lava fountains erupting from the volcano's north vent were reaching heights of over 1,000 feet, the observatory said. That intensity overlapped with an increase in seismic activity, the observatory said. Fifteen minutes later, at 1:55 a.m. local time, the volcano was continuing to emit 800-foot-high fountains of lava. A camera at the volcano continued to livestream images of impressive lava fountains shooting into the air. Lava erupts from Kilauea on June 20, 2025. U.S. Geological Survey The fountains are feeding a lava flow, the observatory said. The lava flow remains contained in the Halema'uma'u caldera, a crater at the top of the volcano, the observatory said. The volcano also released a volcanic cloud about 15,000 feet into the air. The observatory warned that the plume may include hazards, including strands of volcanic glass known as Pele's hair and rock fragments called tephra. These hazards, along with volcanic gas, can have "far-reaching effects downwind," the observatory said. Winds around the volcano are blowing from the north, so these fragments may be distributed south of the caldera, the observatory said. This is the volcano's 26th lava fountaining episode since December 2024. Most episodes have lasted for a day or less, and are separated by pauses of at least several days, the observatory said. Kilauea, located on the Big Island's Hawaii Volcanoes National Park about 200 miles from Honolulu, is one of six active volcanoes in Hawaii. It is also one of the world's most active volcanoes. Its eruptions have become a popular attraction. The USGS also offers multiple YouTube livestreams of the volcanic activity. Hawaii is also home to the largest active volcano in the world, Mauna Loa. The volcano is also located in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park and last erupted in 2022.

Coke Zero vs. Diet Coke: What's the Difference?
Coke Zero vs. Diet Coke: What's the Difference?

Health Line

timean hour ago

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Coke Zero vs. Diet Coke: What's the Difference?

There isn't much difference between Coke Zero and Diet Coke. You can drink either coke if you want to reduce your sugar intake, as both of them contain artificial sweeteners. You've likely heard that limiting the amount of added sugar in your diet is important for your health. People who regularly consume sodas may try switching to sodas made with artificial or non-nutritive sweeteners to reduce their added sugar intake. These alternatives make products taste sweet but don't lead to the blood sugar increases that traditional sugar may cause. Diet drinks are a way to avoid added sugars in beverages, but more recently, sodas with 'zero' in their name have hit the market alongside them. Coca-Cola is a popular example of a brand with both 'diet' and 'zero' varieties. If you're wondering about the differences between Coke Zero and Diet Coke — and how to determine which is a better choice for you — read on. Nutrition facts and ingredients of Coke Zero and Diet Coke Below are the ingredients and nutrition facts for both Coke Zero and Diet Coke. In this section, we'll break down some of the key differences and similarities you may want to consider. Coke Zero nutrition facts Coke Zero's ingredients include: carbonated water caramel color phosphoric acid aspartame potassium benzoate (to protect taste) natural flavors potassium citrate acesulfame potassium caffeine It also contains the amino acid phenylalanine, so people with phenylketonuria (PKU) should avoid it. A 12-ounce (355-mL) serving of Coke Zero provides: Calories: 0 Total fat: 0 grams (g) Sodium: 40 milligrams (mg) Total carbohydrate s: 0 g Total sugars: 0 g Protein: 0 g Potassium: 60 mg Caffeine: 34 mg Coke Zero contains no added sugars since it uses artificial sweeteners instead. It comes in a variety of flavors, including cherry, cherry vanilla, orange vanilla, and vanilla. Coke Zero also has less caffeine than Diet Coke. Caffeine-free Coke Zero is also available. Diet Coke nutrition facts Diet Coke's ingredients include: carbonated water caramel color aspartame phosphoric acid potassium benzoate (to protect taste) natural flavors citric acid caffeine Like Coke Zero, Diet Coke contains the amino acid phenylalanine, so people with PKU should avoid it. A 12-ounce (355-mL) serving of Diet Coke provides: Calories: 0 Total fat: 0 g Sodium: 40 mg Total carbohydrate: 0 g Total sugars: 0 g Protein: 0 g Caffeine: 46 mg Diet Coke contains no added sugars since it uses artificial sweeteners instead. Regular Diet Coke uses aspartame, but you can also purchase a variety of Diet Coke that's made with Splenda, a brand of sucralose. Flavor varieties of Diet Coke include ginger lime and feisty cherry. Like Coke Zero, Diet Coke also comes in a caffeine-free version. 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Focus more on strength and mobility and less on weight
Focus more on strength and mobility and less on weight

CNN

timean hour ago

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Focus more on strength and mobility and less on weight

Food & health Wellness Chronic diseasesFacebookTweetLink Follow Editor's note: Shift Your Mindset is an occasional series from CNN's Life, But Better team. We talk to experts about how to do things differently to live a better life. Anti-aging aspirations have turned longevity products and services into a wellness-industry gold mine. But who wants to add on years only to spend them struggling to move, dependent on others and unable to enjoy basic activities? What's the point of sticking around longer if you can't actually live life? Building and maintaining strength and mobility helps preserve the independence you need to age with dignity — and the actions you take now make all the difference. In their new book 'The Complete Bone and Joint Health Plan: Help Prevent and Treat Osteoporosis and Arthritis,' dietitian and personal trainer Sydney Nitzkorski and orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine specialist Dr. Jocelyn Wittstein share the strategic diet and exercise choices you can make now to help maintain your quality of life well into your later years. Nitzkorski is a sports dietitian at Marist University in Poughkeepsie, New York, and she runs a private fitness and nutrition practice. Wittstein is an associate professor at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina. This conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity. CNN: What's the biggest misconception about bone and joint health? Dr. Jocelyn Wittstein: Most people don't realize that bone mineral density (BMD) peaks at around age 30. After that, your goal is to maintain your BMD and try to slow down bone loss. For women, bone density decreases about 1% annually until menopause and then accelerates to 2% a year. Men experience a roughly 1% annual decline. The key is to build a strong foundation early and continue supporting your bone and joint health throughout your life. Another misconception is that cardiovascular exercise alone is enough to preserve mobility, but strength training and light impact exercises are critical, too. These activities can elevate the peak bone density of people in their teens and 20s, while people older than 30 need those same exercises to minimize loss. This is important considering that 1 in 4 adults will get osteoarthritis, and anyone older than age 50 has a heightened risk for both arthritis and osteoporosis, women in particular. A full 77% of postmenopausal women reported joint pain in a randomized study. Sydney Nitzkorski: As a dietitian, I find that people don't think enough about how much calcium they're taking in, and most people are not getting enough. Your body can't make the calcium it needs, not just for bones and teeth but also heart, muscle and nerve function. If you're not consuming enough, your body will raid the reserves in your skeleton to meet its requirements. This is why everybody, at every age, needs to get enough calcium. If you have kids, make sure they're consuming enough now, because this is when they're building bone mass. But sufficient calcium is still important even if you're 60 or beyond. Boosting your bone health is incredibly important at every age, and it's never too late to start taking proactive steps. CNN: Are calcium supplements necessary? Nitzkorski: Whole foods are the best sources for calcium, with supplementation as a secondary option. I recommend that people track their intake for a typical week and then adjust accordingly. Adults need 1,000 to 1,200 milligrams of calcium daily. Good sources include milk, fortified plant milks, broccoli and kale, as well as sardines and anchovies because you eat the bones. Wittstein: Plus bok choy, which I consider a superfood. It's the green vegetable with the highest bioavailability of calcium. The calcium your body gets from a food depends on two factors: the total calcium the food contains and the bioavailability of that calcium, or how well the body absorbs and uses the mineral. A cup of milk has 300 milligrams of calcium that is 30% bioavailable, while a cup of bok choy has 160 milligrams that is 55% bioavailable. Yet, each one provides the body with an equivalent amount of calcium: about 87.5 milligrams. Along with bok choy's excellent calcium bioavailability, it also provides fiber and vitamins A and C. I love to prepare this green vegetable superfood with garlic, ginger and olive oil, making it an excellent anti-inflammatory food for joints and overall health. CNN: Pressing question: Can we count the calcium from milk in coffee? Nitzkorski: Yes! In the book, Jocelyn and I share that we both nail our calcium targets by drinking a lot of milk with a little bit of coffee. It's true that consuming more than 300 milligrams per day of caffeine lowers your body's calcium absorption — but that's a high bar when you consider an 8-ounce cup of coffee contains around 100 milligrams and a double shot of espresso contains about 140 milligrams. Wittstein: Milk, whether it's from cows or a plant-based type that's been supplemented, is a good source of vitamin D, too. We know that consuming 2,000 IU of vitamin D a day can benefit bone health and may help decrease joint pain. When it comes to coffee, people are often glad to learn that it is rich in anti-inflammatory antioxidants. It contains the polyphenol quercetin, which may help alleviate pain and has anti-inflammatory properties. I like to add cinnamon to my coffee for added anti-inflammatory effect and glucose control. You can also add whey protein — which provides amino acids that your body uses to build muscle — and/or collagen supplements, which can improve both bone density and joint pain, depending on the type. CNN: What's the connection between inflammation and joint health? Wittstein: Inflammation can break down cartilage and contribute to joint pain. Chronic inflammation accelerates joint deterioration. Anti-inflammatory nutrition taken in through diet and supplements like omega-3 fatty acids and curcumin, for example, can help ease symptoms like pain and swelling. CNN: What does an anti-inflammatory diet look like? Nitzkorski: What I love about recommending anti-inflammatory foods is that they provide so many other benefits, too, such as decreasing heart attack risk, increasing longevity, improving digestion and giving you more energy. An anti-inflammatory diet is rich in lean proteins, which could be animal-based — such as non- or low-fat dairy, eggs, fish, chicken or turkey — or plant-based like beans, lentils and soy as well as pea proteins, which are found in a lot of protein powders. An anti-inflammatory diet also includes healthy fats, such as olive oil and foods containing omega-3 fatty acids like fish as well as walnuts and flax, chia and basil seeds. Alliums — including garlic, onion, leeks and shallots — are flavorful plants that have multiple anti-inflammatory properties. And there's a whole spectrum of spices including turmeric, cayenne, black pepper and ginger. Wittstein: Also important is dietary fiber from fruits, vegetables, beans and whole grains that provides short-chain fatty acids, higher levels of which are associated with lower levels of inflammation. Fruits and vegetables also contain myriad anti-inflammatory phytochemicals — naturally occurring compounds that provide an array of health benefits. Avoiding or limiting inflammatory ingredients like processed meats, red meat, fried foods, saturated fats and processed carbohydrates is also important. CNN: What types of exercise promote bone and joint health? Wittstein: It's critical to incorporate resistance training and impact exercises. The goal is to work into your 150 minutes of weekly activity a combination of the following: three days of weight-bearing aerobic exercise, two days of resistance training, and two days of balance work and light-impact exercises. That might sound like a lot, but these don't have to be long, intense sessions, and several of these types of conditioning can be combined. Standing on one leg and doing an overhead press counts as resistance training as well as balance work, for example. There are multiple things we want you to do to stimulate your bones and your muscles in different ways, but some of these activities can count as two. Nitzkorski: You can also integrate little exercises into your daily life. Just as we lose muscle and bone mass with age, we also lose our ability to balance. Practice intentionally throwing yourself off balance a little bit so your body must work to find its equilibrium again. Stand on one foot while brushing your teeth. Instead of sitting while watching TV, stand on one leg. Pretend a paintbrush is strapped to your toe and try to write your name or the alphabet. Write A through M on your right leg, and then switch and do N through Z on your left. To work on muscular endurance, do little arm circles. These start out super easy, but if you do them for two or three minutes it becomes exhausting. CNN: What do you mean by light-impact exercises? Wittstein: These include small jumps, jumping jacks or jumping rope. Studies show that doing 10 to 50 jumps three times a week is enough to stimulate your bone density. I encourage people to weave them into their day. By doing a little bit of hopping while you're waiting for the bus, you're getting your heart rate up and getting in some light-impact conditioning. CNN: Do you recommend jumping if it causes knee pain? Nitzkorski: No, people should listen to their joint pain! If jumping hurts your knees, focus on other kinds of conditioning like shallow squats, for example. You can also spread out your jumps over the course of the day or a week so you are not doing too many in a row. Or you can modify jumping exercises by using the back of a chair, or something else, for balance. Wittstein: Or try modifications like pool jumping, which adds resistance and partly reduces impact. Water-based exercises are not as effective as land-based jumping exercises, but they are definitely beneficial for bone mineral density. Although the gains from some of these exercise-based interventions may seem small, they actually translate to big risk reductions. We know from studies of pharmaceutical interventions that a 2% increase in lumbar-spine-bone density reduces spine fracture risk by 28%. A 4% improvement in hip-bone density decreases hip fracture risk by 32%. So even small improvements matter significantly. CNN: Is it ever too late to start boosting your bone and joint health? Nitzkorski: Absolutely not. While it's ideal to start early, you can always benefit from improving your diet and exercise routine. Start small — even 10 minutes of activity is better than nothing. Over time, small dietary changes can become a habit that sticks. The goal is consistency and gradual improvement so you can enjoy the life you live for that much longer. Editor's note: Sign up for CNN's Fitness, But Better newsletter series. Our seven-part guide will help you ease into a healthy routine, backed by experts. Jessica DuLong is a Brooklyn, New York-based journalist, book collaborator, writing coach and the author of 'Saved at the Seawall: Stories From the September 11 Boat Lift' and 'My River Chronicles: Rediscovering the Work That Built America.'

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