Title: HIV Infection and Pregnancy Managing Mother and Baby
1- HIV Infection and Pregnancy Managing
Mother and Baby
The National Pediatric Family HIV Resource
Center University of Medicine Dentistry of New
Jersey
2-
- In collaboration with regional AIDS Education
Training Centers - With support from the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Cooperative Agreement
R62/CCR217856-02
3- Scope of the Epidemic Among Women and Children
- 125,000 AIDS cases in women reported through June
1999 - AIDS in women has risen from 7 early in the
epidemic to 24 of adult cases today - 263 new AIDS cases reported in children in 1999
- 10,000 20,000 estimated children living with
HIV infection - 300 400 babies continue to be born with HIV
infection each year in the U.S.
4- Perinatal Transmission of HIV
- Without antiretroviral drugs during pregnancy,
mother-to-child transmission has ranged from
1625 in North America and Europe - 21 transmission rate in the U.S. in 1994 before
the standard recommendations of zidovudine (ZDV)
in pregnancy - In 1995, transmission rate was 11 after the
change in practice
5- USPHS Guidelines for the Use of Antiretroviral
Drugs in Pregnant Women for Maternal Health
Prevention of HIV Transmission
- Developed in 1994 in response to ACTG 076
- Working Group reconvened in December 1999 and
meets monthly - Updated recommendations available online at
HIV/AIDS Treatment Information Service web site
(www.hivatis.org)
6- Impact of PHS Guidelines for Reducing Perinatal
HIV Transmission
- Perinatal HIV transmission has declined sharply
since the USPHS issued guidelines in 1994,
resulting in a dramatic decrease in pediatric
AIDS cases - 4-State Study Louisiana, Michigan, New Jersey
and South Carolina (CDC, 1998) - Women diagnosed before giving birth
- Women offered prenatal ZDV
- Women offered intrapartum ZDV
- Infants offered neonatal ZDV
1993 1996
68 ? 81 27 ? 85 5 ? 75 5 ?
76
7- National Recommendations for HIV Testing of
Pregnant Women
- Universal testing with patient notification as a
routine component of prenatal care - Institute of Medicine (IOM)Reducing the
Odds1998 - American Academy of Pediatrics the American
College of Obstetricians GynecologistsJoint
Statement1999 - USPHS recommendations are under revision (coming
soon) - Important Regulations, laws, policies about
HIV screening of pregnant women vary state to
state
8- Routine Counseling and Voluntary HIV Testing of
All Pregnant Women
- Provider Role
- Include HIV prevention education as part of
routine antenatal care - Offer HIV testing to all pregnant women
- Provide information on HIV/AIDS
- Consider womans age, culture, education, and
language
9- Routine Counseling and Voluntary HIV Testing of
All Pregnant Women
- Provider Role
- Document consent /or decision NOT to test
- Address reasons for not testing and offer again
- Offer the test again for clinical indications
- Provide/refer women with risk behaviors for more
intensive client-centered prevention counseling
10- Routine Education/Counseling about the HIV Test
for Pregnant Women
- Content individual counseling, or by brochures,
videos, group classes - Cause of HIV/AIDS and how it is spread
- Highly effective treatment is available for the
womans health and to protect the fetus from
acquiring HIV - HIV testing is recommended for all pregnant women
- Services are available to help women from
becoming infected and to provide medical care and
other assistance to those who are infected
11- Prenatal Messages for Counseling Pregnant Women
About the HIV Test
- Anyone can get HIV infection. Women especially
may not know they are at risk - HIV is treatable. Treatment can prolong a womans
life and prevent HIV transmission to her infant
during pregnancy - Most women who get the HIV test do not have the
virus - If a woman is HIV during pregnancy, she can get
treatment immediately
12- Prenatal Messages (continued)
- If a woman is HIV negative during pregnancy, she
can learn ways to prevent getting the infection
in the future - All information about HIV testing and the results
are kept confidential to the extent allowed by
law. Results may be reportable in your state - Federal and state laws protect women with HIV
from discrimination - Experts recommend that all pregnant women receive
an HIV test regardless of whether a woman thinks
she is at risk
13- Counseling the Pregnant Woman with a Positive HIV
Test Result
- Meaning of the positive test results
- Need for medical management
- Treatment options for her and/or to reduce
perinatal transmission - Importance of social support
- Referral for social services
- Collaboration between OB, HIV specialist, and the
pregnant woman
14- Counseling the Pregnant Woman with a Negative HIV
Test Result
- Explain the meaning of the negative test results
- Discuss and reinforce risk reduction strategies
- Teach safer sexual practices to help assure she
continues to be HIV negative
15- Acceptance of HIV Testing among Pregnant Women
- IOM reported 7586 of pregnant women accepted
voluntary HIV testing - The IOM reported that evidence demonstrates that
pregnant women are likely to accept HIV testing
when it is offered
16- Barriers and Supports to Universal Prenatal HIV
Testing
- Providers recommendation about testing
- 92.8 were tested if strongly recommended
- 42 if clinician had not recommended
- Private insurance associated with not being
tested - Reasons for not being tested
- Not perceiving herself at risk (55.3)
- Having been tested recently (39)
- Test not offered or recommended (11)
- Adverse consequences rarely mentioned
17- Interpreting HIV Test Results
- Standard HIV Serology
- ELISA enzyme immunoassay (EIA)
- Initial screening
- If repeatedly reactive, confirmed by supplemental
test (Western blot) - Western Blot confirmatory test
- Optional Testing
- Rapid/Expedited Testing
- Reactive rapid test MUST be confirmed by a
supplemental test
18- Timing of Perinatal HIV Transmission
- Cases documented intrauterine, intrapartum, and
postpartum by breastfeeding - In utero 2540 of cases
- Intrapartum 6075 of cases
- Addition risk with breastfeeding
- 14 ? risk with established infection
- 29 ? risk with primary infection
- Current evidence suggests most transmission
occurs during the intrapartum period
19- Breastfeeding and HIV Infection
- Women with HIV infection in the U.S. should not
breastfeed - Women considering breastfeeding should know their
HIV status
20- Factors Influencing Perinatal Transmission
- Maternal Factors
- HIV-1 RNA levels (viral load)
- Low CD4 lymphocyte count
- Other infections, Hepatitis C, CMV, Bacterial
Vaginosis - Maternal injection drug use
- Lack of ZDV during pregnancy
- Obstetrical Factors
- Length of ruptured membranes/chorioamnionitis
- Vaginal delivery
- Invasive procedures
- Infant Factors
- Prematurity
21- Maternal Viral Load and Risk of Transmission
Women Infants Transmission Study (WITS)
HIV-1 RNA
Transmission
N
0 16.6 21.3 30.9 40.6
lt1000 1000 - 10,000 10,001- 50,000 50,001-100,00
0 gt100,000
0/57 32/193 39/183 17/54 26/64
22- Maternal Viral Load (VL), ZDV Treatment and the
Risk of Perinatal HIV Transmission
- Correlation between high maternal VL and
transmission - Transmission observed at every VL level,
including undetectable levels - No HIV RNA threshold below which there was no
risk of transmission - ZDV decreases transmission regardless of HIV RNA
level - Recommendation Initiate maternal ZDV regardless
of plasma HIV RNA or CD4 counts
23What have we learned?
- Interrupting Perinatal HIV Transmission
- Study Results
24- A phase III randomized placebo-controlled trial
of zidovudine (ZDV) for the prevention of
maternal-fetal HIV transmission - Treatment Regimen
- Antepartum 100 mg ZDV po 5x day, started at 14
34 weeks gestation - IntrapartumDuring labor, 1- hour initial dose 2
mg/kg IV followed by continuous infusion of 1
mg/kg until delivery - Postpartum/Infant Regimen2 mg/kg po q 6 hr for 6
weeks, to start 8 12 hours after birth
25Results of ACTG 076
30
This represents a 66 reduction in risk for
transmission (P lt0.001) Efficacy was observed
in all subgroups
20
22.6
Transmission Rate ()
10
7.6
ZDV Group
Placebo
26- Follow-up of Uninfected Infants in ACTG 076 ZDV
versus Placebo
- No significant difference in growth
- No difference in CD4 and CD8 counts between
groups - No other safety abnormalities have been
identified - No differences in Bayley developmental scores in
uninfected infants in ACTG 219 - Follow-up of infants with exposure to nucleoside
analogues is ongoing due to the potential for
mitochondrial toxicity - In the U.S. no cases of mitochondrial toxicity
have been identified
27- Follow-Up of Women in ACTG 076
- Median follow-up 4.2 years
- No substantial differences in CD4 count, time to
progression to AIDS, or death in women who
received ZDV compared to those who received
placebo
28- Reducing Intrapartum HIV Transmission
- Studies of Short Course Therapy
- Oral ZDV in a non-breastfeeding population
(Thailand) from 36 weeks and during labor - Transmission rate 9.4 ZDV vs 18.9 placebo
- Petra study intrapartum/postpartum oral ZDV/3TC
in a breast-feeding population (Uganda, S.
Africa,Tanzania) - Transmission rate 10 ZDV/3TC vs 17 placebo
- HIVNet 012 intrapartum/postpartum/neonatal
nevirapine (NVP) vs short course/neonatal ZDV in
a breast-feeding population (Uganda) - Transmission rate 12 NVP vs 21 ZDV
29- Reducing HIV Transmission with
- Suboptimal Regimens
- Partial ZDV regimens (New York cohort)
- Transmission rates
- 6.1 with prenatal, intrapartum, and infant ZDV
- 10 with only intrapartum ZDV
- 9.3 if only infant ZDV started within first 48
hours - 26.6 with no ZDV
30Treating Women with HIV Infection in Pregnancy
31- Goals of Antiretroviral Therapy
- To prolong life and improve quality of life
- To suppress HIV to below the limits of detection
or as low as possible, for as long as possible - To preserve or restore immune function
32- When Should an Adult be Treated?
Clinical Category CD4 count HIV RNA
Recommendations
Symptomatic Asymptomatic Asymptomatic
Any value CD4 T cells lt200/mm3 HIV RNA any
value CD4 T cells gt200/mm3 but lt350 /mm3, HIV
RNA any value CD4 T cells gt350/mm3, HIV RNA
gt30,000 (bDNA) or gt55,000 (RT-PCR) CD4 T cells
gt350/mm3, HIV RNA lt30,000(bDNA) or lt55,000
(RT-PCR)
Treat Treat Offer treatment if pt willing to
accept Some experts would treat Many experts
would delay therapy observe
33- Guidelines for Care of All Pregnant Women with
HIV Infection
- Provide standard clinical evaluation HIV
disease stage - Provide standard immunologic evaluation
absolute CD4, CD4 - Provide standard virologic evaluation HIV-RNA
copy number (viral load) - Discuss known or unknown risks/benefits of
therapy during pregnancy - Develop strategy for long term evaluation and
management of mother/infant
34- Guidelines for Antiretroviral Drugs in Pregnancy
Concepts
- Use optimal ARV for the womans health
- Add ZDV regimen for reducing perinatal HIV
transmission - Discuss preventable risk factors for perinatal
transmission - Counsel on cesarean delivery
- Support decision-making by woman following
discussion of known and unknown benefits and
risks - Acceptance or refusal of ARV or ZDV should not
result in denial of care or punitive action
35- Guidelines for Antiretroviral Drugs in
Pregnancy Clinical Scenario 1
Women without prior antiretroviral therapy
- Recommend
- Standard combination therapy for women with high
viral load, low CD4 count - Combination therapy for women with viral load
?1,000 regardless of clinical or immunologic
status - 3-part ZDV regimen to reduce perinatal
transmission for all HIV-infected pregnant
women, regardless of antenatal viral load - Consider delaying therapy until completion of
first trimester - Offer scheduled cesarean delivery for women with
viral loads gt1000 (based on most recent VL
results)
36Women currently on antiretroviral therapy
- Discuss benefits and potential risks of her
current regimen during pregnancy - Add or substitute ZDV at ?14 weeks
- Recommend intrapartum and neonatal ZDV
- Discontinue teratogenic drugs
- Consider continuing or stopping current therapy
based on gestational age (lt14 weeks) - If therapy is stopped, stop and restart all ARV
simultaneously - Resistance testing for suboptimal viral
suppression or failure
37Women with HIV infection and present in labor
with no previous treatment
- Discuss benefits of treatment during intrapartum
and neonatal period - Four treatment options
- Single dose nevirapine for mother at onset of
labor followed by single dose of nevirapine for
the newborn at age 4872 hrs - Oral ZDV/3TC for mother during labor followed by
one week oral ZDV/3TC to the newborn - Intrapartum IV ZDV followed by six weeks ZDV for
the newborn - The two-dose nevirapine regimen as above combined
with intrapartum IV ZDV and six week ZDV for the
newborn
38Infant whose mother did not receive prenatal or
intrapartum ZDV
- Offer the six-week neonatal ZDV component
- Initiate therapy as soon as possible after
maternal consent (preferably within 6 12 hours
of birth) - Begin diagnostic testing of the infant
- Refer to pediatric HIV specialist for long-term
care
39- Assessment of the Pregnant Woman with HIV
Infection
Initial Assessment Desires
Antiretroviral Therapy
Yes
No
Treat according to clinical immunologic status
Monitor for HIV disease progression
Recommend ZDV Recommend combination therapy if VL
gt1000 Discuss C/S
Wants to ? perinatal transmission
40- Follow-Up Assessment of Pregnant Woman with HIV
4 weeks after initiation of treatment, then q 3
months if viral load stable
- Fetal assessment based on gestational age
- CD4 and viral load response
- New onset of symptoms
- Side effects or toxicities
- Adherence to therapy
- Long-range planning for continuity of medical
care
41- Changing HIV Therapy During Pregnancy
- Poor CD4 response
- Drugs with potential teratogenicity
- Poor viral load response
- Poor adherence to regimen
- Evidence of viral resistance
42- Cesarean Section to Reduce Perinatal HIV
Transmission
- Pregnant women with VL gt1000 should be counseled
re potential benefit of scheduled C/S to reduce
perinatal transmission - Unknown whether scheduled C/S offers any benefit
to women on HAART with low or undetectable VL
given the low transmission rate - Complications of C/S similar to HIV uninfected
women - Patients decision should be respected and honored
43- Preterm Labor and the Use of Combination
Antiretroviral Therapy
- A Swiss study reported a possible association
between combination ARV therapy and preterm
births - Preliminary review of U.S. cohorts has not
supported the association - Patients should be educated and cautioned about
signs of preterm labor
44- Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry
- A collaborative project managed by PharmaResearch
Corporation on behalf of an advisory committee
(specialists in OB/Gyn, ID, teratology,
epidemiology, and CDC and NIH members) and
sponsored by - Abbott Laboratories, Agouron Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., Boehringer Ingelheim Company, Bristol-Myers
Squibb, Co., DuPont Pharmaceuticals Company,
GlaxoSmithKline, F. Hoffmann-LaRoche Ltd., Merck
Co., Inc. - Purpose To assess safety of antiretroviral
drugs during pregnancy - Telephone (800) 258-4263 Fax (800) 800-1052
45- Comprehensive Care of Women Postpartum
- Primary and HIV specialty care
- Ob/gyn and family planning services
- Mental health and substance abuse treatment as
needed - Coordination of care through case management for
the woman and her family - Support services for the family
46- Evaluation and Follow up of Infants
- HIV diagnostic testing to establish or rule-out
HIV infection as early as possible - Referral to an HIV specialist
- PCP prophylaxis initiated at 6 weeks of age
- Long-term follow-up of HIV- and ARV-exposed
infants - Support services for the family
47Case Studies
48Case Study 1
- Angela, 41 y.o., first prenatal visit,
approximately 19 weeks gestation, tested HIV 2
months ago. CD4 725, HIV-1 RNA 600 copies/ml.
This is her 4th pregnancy, she has no children. - What recommendations for antiretroviral therapy
apply in this case? - What questions will you ask what options to
present? - What OB condition may complicate this case?
- Follow-up after delivery for the woman and infant
49Case Study 2
- Maria, 27 y.o., at 35 weeks gestation, requested
HIV test. Former boyfriend died of AIDS. Test is
positive, CD4 350, HIV-1 RNA 120,000 husband
and child test negative. Refuses ZDV. It made
my boyfriend worse. Wants the cocktail that
Magic Johnson uses. - What are the recommendations for this woman?
- Psychological issues? Related to community
beliefs? - What counseling will you do?
50Case Study 3
- Ellen, 32 y.o., 9 10 weeks gestation, tested
positive on voluntary prenatal screening. A
former heroin user, she is now on methadone. CD4
198. HIV-1 RNA is 100,000. Under stress. Wants
HAART therapy and aC-section. Wants to know what
else she can do to stay well. Heard that
ritonavir is a good drug. - What are the recommendations for this woman?
- Screening for other infectious complications?
- Options for reducing perinatal transmission?
- What management issues does this case present?
51Case Study 4
- Heather, 14 weeks gestation, HIV for 5 years,
stage B2 (mild dysplasia), CD4 220 HIV-1 RNA is
5,000. Shes on ZDV, ddI and nelfinavir. Shes
anemic. Husband has AIDS. This is a planned
pregnancy. Office staff feel this couple is
irresponsible for having a baby. - What are the recommendations for this woman?
- What information does this couple need?
- What are other options for this woman? Should she
be referred? - How are you going to deal with the office staff?
52Case Study 5
- Joan, G8P3222, HIV for 3 years, admitted with
ruptured membranes. No prenatal care. Lost 2
children to HIV. Urine for cocaine, GB strep
(urine, cervix), other STDs negative. CD4 845. - What are the recommendations for this mother and
infant? - How will you present the 076 regimen to this
woman? - What alternative therapies can she choose to
decrease perinatal transmission? - What should follow-up care include?
53Case Study 6
- Twelve hours after the birth of her infant,
Angela Gs HIV test comes back positive. She
tested negative early in her pregnancy but the
test was repeated on admission to L D because
she reported that her husband was back to using
IV drugs. She did not have any antenatal or
intrapartum antiretroviral therapy. - What are the recommendations for this mother and
infant? - How will you present the 076 regimen to this
woman and what are the options ? - What follow-up care is needed for Angela and her
baby?