Healthy gay men should be offered daily HIV drugs to prevent infections, say campaigners.
A UK study, on 545 high-risk men, found one case of HIV could be stopped for every 13 men treated for a year.
The research team says it would be similar to the pill for women and would not encourage risky sex.
The findings have been described as a "game changer" and the NHS is considering how to adopt them.
Antiretroviral drugs have transformed HIV treatment and patients have a near-normal life expectancy.
Now there is a growing body of research showing the drugs can have a dramatic role in preventing new infections.
Massive fall
Gay men face a high risk of contracting HIV. In London, one in eight gay men has HIV while the figure is one in 26 in the rest of the UK.
In the first year of the study, 19 people developed HIV out of the 269 men who were not given the medicine.
There were just two cases in the 276 patients given preventative drugs - a fall of 86%.
The trial was altered as the early results were so promising, and all participants are now getting the drugs.
Risky sex?
Concerns had been raised that men given the drug would adopt riskier behaviours including stopping using condoms.
But the scientists found no difference in levels of other sexually transmitted infections, such as chlamydia.
"We certainly think the NHS should be considering making this available," said one of the researchers Dr Anthony Nardone from Public Health England.
He added: "I don't envisage all men taking PrEP [pre-exposure prophylaxis] for all their lives, but in effect what we're doing is giving men an option to get through periods of very high risk in their lives."
Fellow scientist Dr Mitzy Gafos, from University College London, said many gay men would not need the drugs as they were not having unprotected sex.
Estimates suggest that between 5,000 and 15,000 men in the UK would be suitable.
Dr Gafos added: "There's very clearly a group of individuals who would benefit from the availability of this product.
"PrEP is having an important impact on removing the inevitability of HIV for many individuals and enhancing the sexual experience, reducing their fears and the concerns that they go through in relationships."
The study has been presented at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Seattle, but the full data has not yet been published in a medical journal.
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