MSF, Doctors Without Borders, HIV prevention drug lenacapavir affordable for all
HIV/Aids

MSF calls on Gilead to expand access to lenacapavir HIV prevention medicine

Key Takeaways

  • Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is calling on Gilead Sciences to make lenacapavir access more widely available worldwide. 
  • Lenacapavir is a long-acting HIV prevention medicine administered twice a year and is nearly 100 per cent effective in preventing HIV acquisition. 
  • MSF says Gilead has restricted supply, limited country access, and refused to sell the medicine directly to MSF. 
  • MSF is urging governments to use TRIPS flexibilities, including compulsory licensing, to expand access. 
  • The campaign launches ahead of the UN General Assembly High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS in New York.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) launched a campaign today calling on the US-based pharmaceutical corporation Gilead Sciences to immediately make the highly effective HIV prevention medicine lenacapavir more widely available across the globe. MSF is also demanding that governments expand access to Lenacapavir access by using all available legal tools to challenge Gilead’s monopoly so other manufacturers can help boost the global supply and further reduce prices

MSF calls on Gilead to Lenacapavir access
MSF protests at the International AIDS Conference, asking for a price reduction for CAB-LA and LEN-LA. 
MSF

MSF launches global campaign for wider lenacapavir access

Gilead, which controls the production and distribution of this game-changing medicine, currently sells it at very high prices to a very limited set of countries, has severely restricted supply to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), and refuses to sell it directly to MSF.

What is lenacapavir, and why does it matter

Lenacapavir is a long-acting injectable form of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) administered just twice a year that is nearly 100 per cent effective in preventing someone from acquiring HIV. It is especially valuable for people at heightened risk, including gay men and other men who have sex with men, transgender individuals, people who use injectable drugs, and sex workers. It is also a critical tool for people on the move, people living in remote areas with few health care options, and people caught in humanitarian emergencies. About 1.2 million people worldwide acquired HIV in 2025.

MSF calls on Gilead to expand Lenacapavir access
MSF protests at the International AIDS Conference, asking for a price reduction for CAB-LA and LEN-LA. 
MSF

MSF warns against repeating past HIV access failures

Dr Tom Ellman, Director, MSF Southern Africa Medical Unit (SAMU) said, “Millions of people need lenacapavir right now. In the early days of HIV/AIDS, we were left empty-handed in places like South Africa as pharmaceutical corporations sold their antiretrovirals to the highest bidders. We know how this ended; we saw our patients with HIV die, and entire communities were devastated. We can’t let history repeat itself with this transformative prevention medicine. Gilead and governments must do more to increase access to this medicine for people everywhere.”

Gilead refuses direct sales to MSF

Despite repeated requests throughout the past year, Gilead has refused to sell this medicine to MSF for use in its medical programs worldwide — at any price. The company has instead told MSF to get it from The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, which has received a limited number of doses from Gilead for LMICs. However, those doses are already running short in places like Eswatini and Kenya, and some of the countries and communities that MSF is trying to reach aren’t eligible to receive them. Meanwhile, lenacapavir is purchasable and heavily marketed in the US, where it is priced at over $28,000 a year per patient.

MSF calls on Gilead to expand Lenacapavir access
MSF protests at International AIDS Conference asking for price reduction for CAB-LA and LEN-LA. 
MSF

Concerns over Gilead’s global access strategy

Melissa Barber, Global Health Advocacy and Policy Advisor, MSF USA, said, “Gilead says it wants to end the HIV epidemic ‘for everyone, everywhere,’ but their strategy raises serious doubts. It’s problematic enough that they have excluded countries with rising HIV incidence, like Brazil, from being able to benefit from generic versions of lenacapavir. Now, it appears that Gilead is closed for business as they refuse to sell us this medicine for use in southern Africa, Central America, and beyond. Gilead must do more to ensure people have access to both shots to cover a full year of protection, for no more than $40.”

The structural problem: restrictive licensing and limited supply

The broader structural problem is Gilead’s restrictive access model, one in which the company controls who can receive lenacapavir, where it can be supplied, and on what terms. Gilead has made a deal with select generic manufacturers to make the medicine available at a lower price than it sells it for in wealthier countries. However, these generics will not be available until 2027 at the earliest. Additionally, many countries — including countries like Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, and Peru — that hosted the lenacapavir clinical trials are excluded from that license altogether. In fact, a quarter of new HIV infections are happening in countries excluded from the existing licensing arrangements.

MSF calls on Gilead to expand access to game-changing HIV prevention medicine lenacapavir
MSF protests at the International AIDS Conference, asking for a price reduction for CAB-LA and LEN-LA. 
MSF

The Role of Governments in Expanding Access

Beyond Gilead, governments also have a role to play in making lenacapavir more widely accessible. If Gilead continues to charge high prices for this medicine and restricts its production, governments should take any and all necessary steps to make it easier to override Gilead’s monopoly on this product. Governments are afforded a broad range of flexibilities under the World Trade Organisation’s agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). For example, countries may grant compulsory licenses on otherwise patented products, allowing them to make use of the subject matter of a patent without the authorisation of the patent holder. Actions like this can remove intellectual property barriers and may facilitate broader generic production.

Dr Tom Ellman, director of the MSF Southern Africa medical unit (SAMU) said, “Governments must step in if Gilead continues to put profits over people's health. There are legal tools in place under the TRIPS agreement to bypass patents that block access to critical medicines like lenacapavir. It's time governments start using them to get more people on this critical HIV prevention medicine.”

Campaign ahead of UN high-level meeting on HIV/AIDS

MSF launched this campaign in advance of the UN General Assembly High-Level Meeting (HLM) on HIV/AIDS in New York next week and is encouraging people to sign up to join the campaign and voice their support for increased access to lenacapavir.