Title: Prevention of Mother to Child HIV Transmission
1Prevention of Mother to Child HIV Transmission
- Dr. Laura Guay
- Vice President for Research
- Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation
- July 15, 2009
- Cape Town, South Africa
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5HIV Disease Course
6Diagnosis of HIV
- HIV antibody tests
- When exposed to HIV (or any infection) the body
makes antibodies to fight the infection - Standard HIV tests measure these antibodies (EIA,
rapid tests, western blot) - HIV antibodies from an HIV infected women cross
the placenta and enter the babys blood - HIV detection tests
- These tests measure the actual parts of the HIV
virus itself (PCR, p24 antigen, viral culture) - These tests can identify HIV infection in a very
young baby
7WHOs 4-Component Strategy for MTCT Prevention
Prevention of unintended pregnancies in
HIV-infected women
Prevention of transmission from an HIV infected
woman to her infant
Prevention of HIV in women, especially young women
Support for HIV infected women, their infant, and
family
Component 1
Component 2
Component 3
Component 4
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10Access to Mother-to-Child Prevention
WHO, UNAIDS, UNICEF - Towards Universal Access
Progress Report 2008
11Benefits of global expansion of PMTCT programs
- Provides opportunity for primary prevention for
large number of HIV uninfected women identified - Provides opportunity for prevention of HIV
infection in children - Provides opportunity as an entry point into HIV
Care for large number of HIV infected women and
their infected infants - However, this is often a missed opportunity as
ongoing HIV care and treatment is not available
12If Women with HIV do not take any HIV drugs
during pregnancy and they breastfeed-
about 30 out of 100 babies born to these women
will get HIV
13Timing of HIV transmission to the infant
During pregnancy Around labour/delivery
During Breastfeeding
14If women and newborns take 1 dose of the drug
nevirapine around the time the baby is born-
only 16 out of 100 babies will get HIV from
their mothers
15If women and newborns take a combination of HIV
drugs during pregnancy and after delivery-
As few as 4-6 out of 100 babies will get HIV from
their mothers
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17Revised WHO Guidelines for infant feeding for HIV
infected women in resource-limited settings
- Balances risk of HIV transmission through BF with
increased illness and death associated with not
BF - The best option depends on a womans health
status/the local situation should take greater
consideration of the counseling/support she can
receive - Exclusive BF is recommended for the first 6
months of life unless replacement feeding is
acceptable, feasible, affordable, sustainable and
safe (AFASS) before that time - When replacement feeding is AFASS, avoidance of
all BF is recommended - At 6 months if replacement feeding is still not
AFASS, continuation of BF with additional foods
is recommended. All BF should stop once a
nutritionally adequate and safe diet without
breast milk can be provided.
18Infant HIV diagnosis
- Early diagnosis of HIV infection in children born
to HIV infected women is critical - -Allows early identification of children who will
benefit from antiretroviral treatment,
appropriate infant feeding choices, prophylaxis,
and close medical follow-up - -Decreases the psychological stress of
uncertainty for the parents, - -Early endpoint in implementation program
evaluation and HIV clinical trials - HIV detection tests must be used in first 12-18
mos., then standard antibody tests are accurate - Early infant diagnosis using dried blood spots
has made services available even in remote areas
19Infant Survival by HIV Infection Status-HIVNET
012 cohort
Proportion alive
HIV neg
92.1
HIV pos
43.2
---- HIV Negative ---- HIV Positive
Age (years)
20Goals of an HIV Care Program
- Prevention of opportunistic infections
- Early identification of complications and their
appropriate management - Use of antiretroviral therapy to maintain and
restore the immune system - Provision of support for HIV-infected persons,
including psychosocial - Engage patients/families in HIV care and
prevention through education, support and
outreach - Establish strong links to community resources
21Basic Medical Care
- Close follow-up and health monitoring
- - Prompt treatment of acute illnesses
- Childhood Immunization
- Vitamin A Supplementation
- General Health Education (Safe water, bednets)
- Management of Diarrhea
- Growth Monitoring Nutrition Education, early
intervention/support
22WHO Indications for Initiation of ARV Therapy in
Children lt 1 Year
- Initially WHO guidelines for ART in children
(2006) recommended starting therapy according to
clinical and/or immunologic criteria - Recent data from a study in South Africa where
infants were put into one group that started
therapy immediately or a second group where
therapy started when WHO criteria were met showed
75 decrease in death when ART was started
immediately - Therefore, WHO revised recommendations in April
2008 such that ALL infants diagnosed with HIV
infection in the first year of life should
receive ART immediately
23Negotiating the PMTCT Activities
?
24Negotiating the PMTCT Activities cont.
25The way forward
- Challenges
- High initial implementation costs
- Community sensitization/mobilization lacking
- Integration of PMTCT within ANC difficult
- Access to women who dont deliver in health
facility - Very low numbers of partners involved
- Changing infant feeding education/practices
- Poor postnatal follow-up
- Successes
- Despite the challenges, we know this can be done,
we have done it. We are making great progress
worldwide, but we all need to keep pushing - forward.
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