Department of Community Health and Social Sciences, CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy.
CUNY Institute for Implementation Science in Population Health.
J Sex Res. 2021 Sep;58(7):891-913. doi: 10.1080/00224499.2021.1936440. Epub 2021 Jun 28.
In 2012, the U.S. FDA approved the first drug for use as HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), which is nearly 99% effective when taken as prescribed. Although the manifest function of PrEP is to prevent HIV infection in the event of exposure, the drug has also had a significant impact on various facets of sexuality. In this review, we focus on research that emerged in the near decade since PrEP's approval, with a specific focus on the ways in which different elements of sex and sexuality have been impacted by gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM), cisgender women, and transgender individuals. We highlight evidence showing how PrEP has enhanced sexual self-esteem, improved sexual pleasure, reduced sexual anxiety, and has increased sexual agency for those taking it. For many, PrEP also serves as a gateway to improve routine health and increase sexual health-care utilization. Additionally, we review the question of whether PrEP is associated with increased sexual risk taking (i.e. risk compensation), and note that, although some data are mixed, PrEP is not intended as an intervention to reduce condomless anal sex or STIs: it aims to prevent HIV. Finally, our review highlights that, although the volume of research on PrEP among GBMSM is robust, it is underdeveloped for cisgender women and transgender populations and insufficient for inclusion in such a review for cisgender heterosexual men was. PrEP research with these populations is an important direction for future research. Finally, from 2012 to 2019, a single PrEP formulation and delivery method was FDA approved (oral emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate). As additional drug formulations (ie.g., emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide) and delivery methods (e.g., microbiocides, vaginal ring, injectable) come to market, it will be important to examine how these, too, impact the spectrum of sexuality.
2012 年,美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)批准了第一种用于 HIV 暴露前预防(PrEP)的药物,该药物在按规定服用时的有效性接近 99%。尽管 PrEP 的显性功能是在暴露时预防 HIV 感染,但该药物也对性行为的各个方面产生了重大影响。在本综述中,我们重点关注了自 PrEP 批准以来近十年中出现的研究,特别是关注了不同性别和性行为元素如何受到男同性恋、双性恋和其他与男性发生性关系的男性(GBMSM)、顺性别女性和跨性别个体的影响。我们强调了表明 PrEP 如何增强性自尊、提高性快感、减少性焦虑以及增加服用者性自主权的证据。对许多人来说,PrEP 也成为改善常规健康和增加性保健利用的途径。此外,我们还回顾了 PrEP 是否与增加性风险行为(即风险补偿)相关的问题,并指出,尽管一些数据存在差异,但 PrEP 并不是减少无保护肛交或性传播感染的干预措施:它旨在预防 HIV。最后,我们的综述强调,尽管针对 GBMSM 的 PrEP 研究数量庞大,但针对顺性别女性和跨性别群体的研究还不够发达,对于顺性别异性恋男性来说,这些研究不足以纳入此类综述。针对这些群体的 PrEP 研究是未来研究的一个重要方向。最后,从 2012 年到 2019 年,FDA 仅批准了一种 PrEP 制剂和给药方法(口服恩曲他滨/替诺福韦二吡呋酯)。随着其他药物制剂(例如恩曲他滨/替诺福韦艾拉酚胺)和给药方法(例如杀菌剂、阴道环、注射剂)进入市场,研究这些方法如何影响性行为的范围也将很重要。