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Home » APO News » Welcoming Innovation Without Losing the Fundamentals: Why Lenacapavir’s Rollout Must Strengthen Combination Prevention in South Africa (By Ngaa Murombedzi)

Welcoming Innovation Without Losing the Fundamentals: Why Lenacapavir’s Rollout Must Strengthen Combination Prevention in South Africa (By Ngaa Murombedzi)

by Queen Amber
2 months ago
in APO News
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By Ngaa Murombedzi, On behalf of AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), Southern Africa Region (www.AIDSHealth.org). 

South Africa’s introduction of long‑acting injectable HIV pre‑exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), Lenacapavir, is a welcome addition to the choices people have to protect against HIV. It signals scientific progress and renews hope in a country that remains at the heart of the global HIV epidemic. With approximately 7.8 million people living with HIV and an estimated 170 000 new infections recorded in 2024, our prevention response must be bold, people‑centred, and grounded in lived realities.

Lenacapavir offers particular promise for adolescent girls and young women, pregnant and breastfeeding mothers, and key and vulnerable populations who continue to face disproportionate HIV risk. For individuals who have struggled with daily oral PrEP adherence, a twice‑yearly injectable option could be life‑changing. Choice matters. Innovation matters. But innovation must never come at the expense of the fundamentals that have carried South Africa’s HIV response forward for decades.

Lenacapavir is PrEP—but it is not comprehensive prevention. It protects against HIV, not against sexually transmitted infections (STIs) or unintended pregnancy. That distinction is not academic; it is critical in a country already burdened by some of the highest STI rates globally and persistently high levels of adolescent pregnancy. At this moment of biomedical progress, we must be clear: injectable PrEP does not replace condoms.

Condoms remain the only prevention tool that simultaneously protects against HIV, STIs, and unplanned pregnancy—and they remain the most cost‑effective intervention available to the public health system. Yet condom use, particularly among young women and within longer‑term or age‑disparate relationships, remains uneven. These patterns are not driven by lack of knowledge alone; they reflect entrenched gender norms, power imbalances, economic vulnerability, and limited negotiation autonomy. Any prevention strategy that ignores these demographic and social realities is destined to fall short.

This is why the rollout of Lenacapavir must strengthen—not weaken—condom promotion and access. In a context of constrained resources and competing health priorities, narrowing prevention messaging risks creating new pressures elsewhere in the system. Rising untreated STIs and ongoing high rates of teenage pregnancy are not side issues; they are core indicators of whether our HIV prevention approach is working.

Community engagement must therefore be non‑negotiable. Biomedical innovation does not succeed in isolation. Communities must fully understand what Lenacapavir is, how it works, how often it must be taken, and—crucially—what it does not protect against. We need ongoing, community‑led consultations that listen to people’s experiences, from access barriers and service quality to perceptions of risk and protection. One‑off messaging is not enough. Listening must be continuous.

South Africa’s progress against HIV has always been strongest when communities were not treated as passive recipients, but as drivers of change. We must return to that principle now. To stem the tide of HIV infections among key and vulnerable populations—while also reversing increases in STIs and teenage pregnancy—we need a deliberate behaviour shift anchored in co‑creation.

The ask is clear.

Government, donors, and implementing partners must:

  • Position key and vulnerable populations as co‑creators of prevention messaging, not merely targets of it.
  • Embed strong, visible condom promotion at every point of Lenacapavir rollout.
  • Integrate routine STI screening and sexual health services into all HIV prevention encounters.
  • Invest in peer‑led, community‑based education and distribution strategies that reflect real‑world relationships, risks, and constraints.
  • Actively and consistently engage men and boys, recognizing that prevention responsibility cannot continue to rest disproportionately on women and girls.

We can welcome innovation without losing our foundations. Lenacapavir expands the prevention toolbox—but combination prevention remains the backbone of an effective response. Condoms, community leadership, and integrated sexual and reproductive health services are not optional add‑ons; they are essential.

As AIDS Healthcare Foundation in Southern Africa, we believe this moment can either strengthen our prevention architecture—or unintentionally weaken it. The difference lies in whether we choose to lead with communities, protect proven interventions, and balance biomedical ambition with social reality. If we do that, innovation will accelerate progress rather than compromise it—and South Africa will be closer to ending new HIV infections while safeguarding broader sexual and reproductive health for all.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of AIDS Healthcare Foundation.

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