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Review
. 2024 Aug 19;100(6):388-394.
doi: 10.1136/sextrans-2024-056176.

Safety of carrageenan-based gels as preventive microbicides: a narrative review

Affiliations
Review

Safety of carrageenan-based gels as preventive microbicides: a narrative review

Cassandra Laurie et al. Sex Transm Infect. .

Abstract

Background: Carrageenan-containing gels researched for the prevention of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) have shown promising results for human papillomavirus prevention in women, but not in men. We conducted a narrative review to assess the safety of these gels for genital use.

Methods: We searched PubMed using MeSH terms and keywords on 5 November 2023. Title/abstract of articles were screened to identify relevant ones. Full-text screening determined eligibility: empirical study evaluating safety of carrageenan-containing gel(s) for genital use.

Results: Of the 125 identified records, 15 were eligible, comprising 14 (10 randomised controlled trials and 4 cohorts) unique study populations. Studies included women only (n=11), men only (n=1) or both (n=3); number of participants ranged from 4 to 6202. Safety was assessed for vaginal (n=13), penile (n=3) and anal use (n=2). Most studies assessed safety of Carraguard (53%), followed by Divine9 (14%), and one each of iota-carrageenan gel, lambda-carrageenan gel, Carvir, PC-6500 (griffithsin and carrageenan) and PC-1005 (MIV-150/zinc acetate/carrageenan). Safety assessment relied on self-report (80.0%), testing for STIs (53.3%), investigator-identified genital findings (93.3%) and/or testing for changes in genital flora (60.0%). Adverse events (AEs) were described by investigators as mostly mild, (mostly) comparable between groups, not observed and/or not significant for vaginal and penile use. Only one study, assessing anal use of carrageenan, reported a significantly higher proportion of AEs in the carrageenan compared with placebo group.

Conclusions: Carrageenan-based gels are generally well tolerated for vaginal and penile, but not anal use. Studies on carrageenan gel's safety for anal use are scarce.

Keywords: Anti-Infective Agents; HPV; Human Papillomavirus.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: ELF reports grants and personal fees from Merck, grants, personal fees and non-financial support from Roche, and personal fees from GSK, outside the submitted work. ELF and ME hold a patent related to the discovery ‘DNA methylation markers for early detection of cervical cancer’, registered at the Office of Innovation and Partnerships, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (October 2018). CL has no conflicts of interest to declare.

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