A new injectable treatment for HIV pre-exposure prevention, or PrEP, has been approved by the Federal Drug Administration.
The drug, Apretude, is approved for at-risk adults and adolescents who weigh at least 77 pounds to reduce the risk of sexually acquired HIV, the FDA announced Monday.
“Today’s approval adds an important tool in the effort to end the HIV epidemic by providing the first option to prevent HIV that does not involve taking a daily pill,” Debra Birnkrant, director of the Division of Antivirals in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in the announcement.
After the initial two injections, Apretude is administered one month apart, then every two months after that. The hope is that high-risk individuals, like men who have sex with men, will have better adherence to taking the PrEP injectable option every two months versus taking a pill everyday.



A Pennsylvania court on Monday said that the state’s constitution guarantees a right to abortion while...
Donald Trump has selected Erica Schwartz to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),...
When Bug got home from school one winter afternoon in late 2024, his mother was on...





























