HIV Pre-exposure prophylaxis
HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is the use of antiretroviral medications by HIV-negative individuals to prevent acquisition of HIV infection. When taken as directed, PrEP reduces the risk of HIV acquisition through sex by >99%.[1] Emergency physicians encounter PrEP in three key contexts: initiating PrEP or bridging to outpatient care after high-risk exposures, managing adverse effects of PrEP medications, and recognizing HIV seroconversion in patients on PrEP.
Note: PrEP is for pre-exposure prevention in HIV-negative individuals. For management after a specific exposure event, see HIV post-exposure prophylaxis.
Background
- ~39,000 new HIV diagnoses annually in the United States (2023)[2]
- An estimated 2.2 million Americans could benefit from PrEP; uptake and adherence remain suboptimal — ~50% of oral PrEP users discontinue within 6–12 months[2]
- Four FDA-approved PrEP options (as of 2025):[1]
- Oral TDF/FTC (Truvada or generic) — daily pill; all exposure types including injection drug use
- Oral TAF/FTC (Descovy) — daily pill; sexual transmission only; not approved for receptive vaginal sex
- Injectable cabotegravir (Apretude) — IM injection every 2 months; all sexual exposure types
- Injectable lenacapavir (Yeztugo) — SC injection every 6 months; all sexual exposure types[2]
- On-demand (2-1-1) PrEP with TDF/FTC is an off-label option for MSM only (not for other populations)[3]
Clinical Features
Patients requesting PrEP in the ED
- Individuals presenting after a sexual encounter who are concerned about HIV risk but do not meet PEP criteria (>72 hours since exposure, or ongoing risk rather than a discrete exposure)
- Patients who have lapsed on their PrEP regimen and want to restart
- Patients identified as high-risk during STI evaluation, sexual assault workup, or other encounters
Patients on PrEP presenting with adverse effects
- TDF/FTC: Renal dysfunction (rising creatinine, Fanconi syndrome — see Tenofovir), bone pain, GI symptoms
- TAF/FTC: Weight gain, dyslipidemia, GI symptoms
- Cabotegravir: Injection site reactions (pain, nodules, induration), headache
- Lenacapavir: Injection site reactions (including persistent subcutaneous nodules lasting months), nausea, headache
Patients on PrEP with possible HIV seroconversion
- Acute retroviral syndrome symptoms: Fever, pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy, rash, myalgias, fatigue (flu-like illness 2–4 weeks after exposure)
- May present despite being on PrEP — breakthrough infections occur, usually with nonadherence to oral regimens
Differential Diagnosis
- Acute HIV exposure requiring PEP (discrete exposure <72 hours ago)
- Acute HIV seroconversion / Acute HIV
- Adverse drug reaction to PrEP medication
- STI (concurrent evaluation should occur)
- Other causes of flu-like illness (if evaluating for seroconversion)
Evaluation
Workup
Before initiating or restarting PrEP:[1]
- HIV Ag/Ab combination (4th generation) test — required to confirm HIV-negative status
- If starting injectable PrEP (lenacapavir or cabotegravir), also send HIV-1 RNA (viral load). For lenacapavir, initiation should not be delayed while awaiting RNA result[2]
- If recently on PrEP (oral in last 3 months, cabotegravir injection in last 12 months), must test with both Ag/Ab and HIV-1 RNA (PrEP medications can delay seroconversion and cause false-negative antibody tests)[1]
- Serum creatinine (for TDF/FTC and TAF/FTC candidates)
- TDF/FTC: Not recommended if CrCl <60 mL/min
- TAF/FTC: Not recommended if CrCl <30 mL/min
- Cabotegravir and lenacapavir: No renal restrictions (except not studied in CrCl <15)
- Hepatitis B serologies (HBsAg, HBsAb, HBcAb) — TDF/FTC and TAF/FTC have anti-HBV activity; stopping them in co-infected patients risks HBV flare. Cabotegravir and lenacapavir do not treat HBV
- STI screening (gonorrhea, chlamydia at relevant sites; syphilis; hepatitis C if risk factors)
- Pregnancy test in individuals of childbearing potential
- No signs or symptoms of acute HIV (fever, rash, pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy arising 2–4 weeks after a known exposure)
If evaluating for seroconversion in a patient on PrEP:
- HIV Ag/Ab combination test and HIV-1 RNA viral load
- CBC, CMP (for general assessment)
Diagnosis
- PrEP is indicated for any HIV-negative adult or adolescent ≥35 kg who would benefit from HIV prevention[1]
- Per CDC, prescribers should offer PrEP to anyone who asks, including those who do not report specific risk factors[1]
- If acute HIV infection is suspected, send HIV-1 RNA — the Ag/Ab test may be negative in very early infection
Management
Same-day PrEP initiation from the ED
- The ED can serve as an access point for PrEP initiation, particularly for patients with barriers to primary care
- Same-day start is possible if:[1]
- HIV Ag/Ab test is negative (rapid test acceptable)
- No signs/symptoms of acute HIV
- Creatinine and pregnancy test obtained (results can be pending for injectable regimens)
- Oral TDF/FTC (Truvada) is the simplest to initiate from the ED:
- 300 mg TDF / 200 mg FTC — 1 tablet PO once daily
- Prescribe a 30-day supply with outpatient follow-up for ongoing management
- Counsel: Take daily with or without food; efficacy depends on adherence
- On-demand (2-1-1) dosing (off-label, MSM only):[3]
- 2 tablets of TDF/FTC taken 2–24 hours before sex
- 1 tablet 24 hours after the first dose
- 1 tablet 48 hours after the first dose
- Injectable options (cabotegravir, lenacapavir) are typically initiated in outpatient settings; refer if patient prefers injectable PrEP
If a patient on PrEP tests HIV-positive
- Discontinue PrEP immediately — PrEP regimens are inadequate for HIV treatment and continued use will select for drug resistance[1]
- Transition to a complete HIV treatment regimen (consult HIV/ID)
- Resistance testing should be performed (particularly important with cabotegravir and lenacapavir given long half-lives)
Managing PrEP adverse effects in the ED
- TDF nephrotoxicity: Check creatinine, phosphorus, UA for glycosuria. If Fanconi syndrome or AKI → hold TDF, consult ID for regimen change (see Tenofovir)
- Injection site reactions (cabotegravir/lenacapavir): Usually self-limited. Lenacapavir nodules may persist ~6 months. If severe erythema, fluctuance, or necrosis → evaluate for improper intradermal injection or abscess
- Hepatitis B flare after PrEP discontinuation: Check LFTs, HBV DNA viral load. May need urgent restart of HBV-active therapy (see Tenofovir, Emtricitabine, Lamivudine)
Key drug interactions to know
- TDF/FTC: Avoid NSAIDs in patients with renal risk factors; avoid concurrent nephrotoxins
- Cabotegravir: Contraindicated with rifampin and certain anticonvulsants (strong enzyme inducers)
- Lenacapavir: CYP3A4 interactions — remember COPPER mnemonic for inducers: Carbamazepine, Oxcarbazepine, Phenobarbital, Phenytoin, Enzalutamide, Rifampin[3]
Disposition
- Discharge with PrEP prescription and outpatient follow-up within 1 month for:
- HIV testing (repeat at 3 months, then quarterly for oral PrEP; at each injection visit for injectables)
- Renal function monitoring (for tenofovir-based regimens)
- STI screening (every 3–6 months)
- Ongoing adherence counseling
- Refer to HIV PrEP clinic or primary care for long-term management, injectable PrEP initiation, or patients with complex needs (hepatitis B co-infection, renal impairment, pregnancy)
- Admit if:
- Suspected acute HIV seroconversion with severe systemic illness
- Significant TDF nephrotoxicity (AKI requiring observation or intervention)
- Severe hepatitis B flare after PrEP discontinuation
See Also
- HIV - AIDS (main)
- HIV post-exposure prophylaxis
- Immune reconstitution syndrome
- Emtricitabine/tenofovir
- Tenofovir
- Lenacapavir
External Links
- CDC Clinical Guidance for PrEP
- NYSDOH AI PrEP Guidelines
- National HIV PrEP Curriculum (University of Washington)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 CDC. Clinical Guidance for PrEP. HIV Nexus. Updated 2025.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 CDC. Clinical Recommendation for the Use of Injectable Lenacapavir as HIV Preexposure Prophylaxis — United States, 2025. MMWR. 2025;74(35).
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 NYSDOH AI. PrEP to Prevent HIV and Promote Sexual Health. Clinical Guidelines Program. 2025.
