Aphane watches as a nurse prepares a syringe filled with lenacapavir for her first dose of this drug that has been shown to reduce the risk of HIV transmission by more that 99.9%. — AFP
Kegoratile Aphane did not flinch when the needle pierced the skin of her right buttock, injecting a yellow-coloured drug touted as a revolution that could end the HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) pandemic.
The 32-year-old was among the very first South Africans – and Africans – to receive a dose of lenacapavir, a drug taken twice a year that has been shown to reduce the risk of HIV transmission by more than 99.9%, making it functionally akin to a powerful vaccine.
“I didn’t even feel any pain,” she said with a relieved smile after receiving the two injections that form the first dose.
Five other patients received lenacapavir on Dec 2 (2025) at a clinic outside of Pretoria as part of an implementation study by a Wits University research unit and funded by the international health agency Unitaid, which works on ensuring equitable access to medical innovations.
The study would enrol 2,000 people and “follow them for at least a year to understand how this prevention option works in real life”, according to Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute (RHI) Implementation Science director and infectious disease epidemiologist Assoc Prof Dr Saiqa Mullick.
With close to one in five adults living with HIV, South Africa has one of the highest rates in the world, and reported last year (2024) the highest number of new infections for any single country: 170,000.
Until now, the best available prevention drug for HIV-negative people was through a daily pill.
The twice-yearly lenacapavir jab would be “life-changing”, said the clinic’s manager Magdaline Ngwato, especially for young people who struggle to maintain the daily schedule of the pill and groups like sex workers or patients from sexual mi- norities who want to be discreet.
“Now, with the injection, it will be fine, because you can do it secretly,” she said, adding that many people had already expressed interest.
“Even mothers said they will send their children to come get it,” she enthused.
“I think we are going to have a lot of HIV-free generations.”
For Aphane, the decision to take the groundbreaking treatment was deeply personal.
“I just lost my mom in 2021 – she was HIV positive,” she said emotionally.
“It’s a very, very, very painful disease.
“So that’s why I (am) so serious about this. Let me be safe and try this.”
Student Katlego, 20, who asked to speak under a pseudonym, was “proud” to have received one of the very first doses.
“You won’t know what the future holds, you might get raped or your partner might infect you without knowing.
“So it’s important for us to take care of ourselves,” she said.
A broader national rollout is expected next year (2026), starting with 400,000 doses that would be received through a deal between lenacapavir’s manufacturer Gilead Sciences and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS.
While lenacapavir currently costs around US$28,000 (RM1,152,900) a year in the United States, generic versions are expected to be available from 2027 at around US$40 (RM164.70) per year in more than 100 countries through agreements by Unitaid and the Gates Foundation with Indian pharmaceutical companies. – By Julie Bourdin/AFP
