Title: Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission
1Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission
- Sindy M. Paul, M.D., M.P.H.
- March 5, 2008
2Is HIV Disease Reportable in New Jersey and Why?
- HIV, AIDS and perinatal exposure reportable to
NJDHSS - Data used for
- Resource allocation
- Trend analysis
- Targeting prevention programs
- Identifying changes in organism
3Epidemiology of HIV Disease in New Jersey
12/31/06
- 5th in US Cumulative reported AIDS Cases
- Highest proportion of women (32)
- 3rd US Cumulative reported pediatric AIDS cases
- 1,248/1,335 (94) pediatric HIV/AIDS perinatal
transmission
4- Timing of Perinatal HIV Transmission
- Cases documented intrauterine, intrapartum, and
postpartum by breastfeeding - In utero 2540 of cases
- Intrapartum 6075 of cases
- Addition risk (14-29) with breastfeeding
- Evidence suggests most transmission occurs during
the intrapartum period
Fowler, MG, Ped. Clinics of N. America 2000.
5Pediatric HIV/AIDS Cases Exposures1993-2006 By
CategoryAs of December 31, 2006
6New Jersey Reported Perinatally HIV Exposed
Children Born in New Jersey 1993-2006 As of
December 31, 2006
12
307
83
7
45
1305
424
239
14
40
193
143
213
33
58
135
17
37
112
76
28
28 Born Out-of-state
7New Jersey Perinatally Exposed HIV Infected
Children Born in New Jersey 1993-2006 As of
December 31, 2006
lt5
31
6
lt5
lt5
136
52
19
lt5
lt5
18
24
12
lt5
9
12
lt5
lt5
6
5
lt5
8New JerseyTop 10 Hospitals of BirthPerinatally
HIV Exposed ChildrenBorn 1993-2006 - As of
December 31, 2006
9New JerseyTop 10 Hospitals of BirthPerinatally
HIV Exposed ChildrenBorn 2001-2006 - As of
December 31, 2006
10Perinatally Exposed HIV ChildrenPrevalence By
MunicipalityBorn 1993-2006As of December 31,
2006
11Perinatally Exposed HIV ChildrenPrevalence By
MunicipalityBorn 2001-2006As of December 31,
2006
12Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission
- The Risk Of Transmission Can Be Reduced
- Prenatal Care
- Mandatory Counseling/Voluntary Testing
- Know Serostatus As Early As Possible!
- Antiretroviral Therapy OB Procedures
- PACTG 076 AZT Decreases Transmission From 25 to
8 - Recommend Against Breast Feeding
13Evaluation of Implementation
- Access to Prenatal Care
- Counseling and Testing Provider Patient
- AZT and other Antiretroviral Agent Use
- Impact on Transmission
- Missed Opportunities
- Potential Toxicities
- Potential Adverse Outcomes
14Access to Prenatal Care 1993, 1995, 1996
- 25 of HIV Infected Pregnant Women Had No Known
Prenatal Care - In 2000 14 No Known Prenatal Care 6 1-2
Prenatal Visits - A Major Gap In Prevention Of Perinatal HIV
Transmission In New Jersey - An Opportunity For Intervention
15Implementation Of Counseling And Testing
Recommendations
- 1995 NJ Law Mandatory Counseling, Voluntary
Testing (Changing 6/08) - Surveillance Data 91 HIV Infected Pregnant
Women Know Serostatus Prior to Delivery 4
Tested at Delivery - Statewide Assessment Diffusion of Counseling And
Testing OBGYN - Interview Study Of Pregnant Women
16Provider Survey Results
- 160/351 (51) Completed Survey
- 94 Offer HIV Testing
- 90 Discuss Benefits of HIV Testing
- 77 Counsel
- 59 Offer All 3 Components
17Respondents More Likely To Offer Counseling
- Fit Into Office Routine plt0.0001
- Better Medical Outcome p0.0261
- Easy p0.0016
- Confident in Counseling plt0.0001
- Patient Appreciation p0.0001
- Standard of Care p0.0002
- Actively Promoted p0.0012
- Discuss with Colleague p0.0171
18Conclusion
- Doing Well, but Room for Improvement
- Missed Opportunities
- Improved Diffusion and Implementation of HIV
Counseling and Testing among OBGN Could be
Accomplished through Peer Education
19Interview Study Pregnant Women
- Convenience sample - 170 Pregnant Women
- Objective To Ascertain How Pregnant Women
Perceive AZT as a Possible Option to Prevent
Perinatal HIV Transmission by Examining Their
Knowledge, Attitudes, Beliefs, and Intentions
Surrounding AZT Use.
20Demographic Profile
- African-American 53
- Hispanic/Latina 29
- Ages 18-34 84
- Unemployed 63
21HIV Counseling and Testing History
- 74 Reported Being Told About Benefits of HIV
Testing - 90 Tested for HIV
- 10 Not Tested Yet
- 13/17 (76) Intended to Be Tested
- 4/17 (24) Did Not Intend to Be Tested
22Intention to Use AZT
- 57 Would Use AZT
- 41 Unsure
- 2 Would Not Take AZT
23Factors Associated With Intention To Use AZT
- Positive Beliefs About AZT plt0.0001
- Recommended by Dr. or Nurse p0.0023
- Access to AZT at Clinic or Dr. p0.0076
- Enough Information plt0.0001
- Conspiracy Theories NOT ASSOCIATED
24Conclusion
- Pregnant Women Are Willing to Consider AZT Use if
They Are Given Adequate, Accurate Information.
25Implementation of PHS Recommendations in New
Jersey
- ART use increased from 8.3 in 1993 to 97.0
known in 2006 - Decrease in perinatal transmission from 21 in
1993 to 2 in 2006 - Room for improvement recent studies show vertical
transmission can be as low as 1-2 - What are the missed opportunities?
26Missed Opportunities Children Who Became Infected
- 7 children infected 1999, 1 infected 2000
(preliminary data reports through 12/31/00) - 5 of the 8 (63) no known or inadequate prenatal
care - 7/8 (88) HIV status unknown to the delivery team
27Missed Opportunities Children Who Became
Infected Continued
- 1 of the 8 (13) had prenatal care starting in
3rd trimester with antiretroviral agents in
pregnancy, labor/delivery, and neonatal period
and a vaginal delivery - Major gap women presenting in labor with unknown
HIV serostatus to the provider - Contributing factor lack of or inadequate
prenatal care
28Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission ?
Serostatus
- Rapid Test for Unknown Serostatus
- Short course therapy options
- Intrapartum IV ZDV 6 weeks ZDV for newborn
- ZDV3TC in labor 1 week ZDV3TC for newborn
- 1 dose NVP labor onset 1 dose NVP for newborn
at 48 hours of age - Single dose maternal/newborn NVP regimen
intrapartum IV ZDV 6 weeks infant ZDV - If NVP used alone or incombination with ZDV,
consider maternal ZDV/3TC intrapartum and
continue 3 7 days postpartum to reduce NPV
29Hospital SurveyManagement Labor Unknown
Serostatus
- Questionnaire telephone survey of 12 hospitals
Essex, Hudson, Union counties - IRB approval
- 12 licensed acute care general hospitals
- 9/12 (75) responded
- 6/9 (67) provide obstetrical care
- 1/9 (10) rapid test capability
30Hospital Survey Management Labor Unknown
Serostatus
- 1/6 (17) always offers CTS in labor
- 2/6 (33) almost always offer CTS in labor
- 2/6 (33) rarely or never offer CTS in labor
- 0 policy for rapid test/short course therapy
- 5/6 (83) use standard EIA Western Blot
- 1/6 (17) use HIV DNA PCR
- Problem obtaining results in 72 hrs to treat
infant with ZDV
31Intent of the Standard of Care
- Provide HIV counseling and voluntary rapid or
expedited testing of mothers or newborns if
unknown HIV status or mother reports HIV
infection with no documentation on the medical
record - Offer maternal /or newborn ART if HIV , mother
reports being HIV , or mother previously
documented to be HIV
32Intent of the Standard of Care
- To decrease the risk of vertical transmission in
every HIV exposed baby born in a New Jersey
hospital to the best practice standards
33Standard of CareWomen in Labor with ? HIV Status
- Provide counseling (pre- and posttest)
- Voluntary rapid or expedited HIV test
- If HIV positive provide preliminary lab results
(CDC ASTPHLD) - If HIV positive offer short course therapy
- DO NOT DELAY RX pending confirmatory lab results
- Refer mother child for follow-up care
34CDC Recommendations Woman Presents in Labor with
? Status
- CDC recommendations similar to NJ
- Counseling
- Template training based on NJ
- Opt out option (Regs preclude in NJ)
- POCT RT short course therapy
- Retest in NJ 3rd Trimester
- Referral for care and treatment
35Prevalence of Diseases Screened for in Newborns
- Tyrosemia 1 in gt
300,000 - Maple-syrup urine disease 1 in 175,000
- Homocystinuria 1 in 100,000
- Galactosemia 1 in 60,000
- Phenylketonuria 1 in 14,000
- Hypothyroidism 1 in 4,000
- Perinatal HIV (US) 1 in 1,500
369/06 CDC Revised RecommendationsPregnant Women -
I
- Universal opt-out HIV screening
- Include HIV in routine panel of prenatal
screening tests - Consent for prenatal care includes HIV testing
- Notification and option to decline
- Note NJ Law/Regulations signed consent or
declination changing 6/08!
379/06 CDC Revised RecommendationsPregnant Women -
II
- Second test in 3rd trimester for pregnant women
- Known to be at risk for HIV
- In jurisdictions with elevated HIV incidence
including NJ - In high HIV prevalence health care facilities
389/06 CDC Revised RecommendationsPregnant Women -
III
- Opt-out rapid testing with option to decline for
women with undocumented HIV status in LD - Initiate ARV prophylaxis on basis of rapid test
result - Note NJ Law Consent or Declination Required
Changing 6/08 - Rapid testing of newborn recommended if mothers
status unknown at delivery - Initiate ARV prophylaxis within 12 hours of birth
on basis of rapid test result
392008 Legislation Pregnant Women and Newborns
- Effective 6/08
- Follow current CDC recommendations
- Give information
- Opt-out HIV Testing 1st 3rd Trimesters
- Opt-out Rapid HIV Testing LD
- All newborns if mothers status unknown unless
written parental religious objection
40FDA Approved, Currently Available Rapid Tests
- OraQuick Advance HIV1/HIV2
- Reveal
- Unigold Recombigen
- Multispot HIV1/HIV2
- Sure Chek(Complete), Stat Pak HIV1/HIV2
- Confirmation with Western Blot or IFA
- Rapid testing recommended by CDC
41Requirements for Rapid HIV Testing
- Have an adequate quality assurance program
- Assurance that operators will receive and use
instructional materials - Compliance with OSHA/PEOSH blood-borne pathogens
regulations
42The Need for Training
- Blood body fluid precautions
- Obtaining the specimen (finger stick or blood
draw) - Performing the test
- Providing test results and counseling
- Quality assurance
- OSHA/PEOSH requirements
43Current Clinical Response to Rapid Testing
Preliminary Positive Results
- Occupational Exposure
- Women in labor with unknown HV status
- Why? Because tested person benefits
- - PEP reduces risk of occupational transmission
- - Short course therapy reduces risk of
mother-to-child HIV transmission
44Summary of Recent Perinatal Infections 2003-2004
- 7 cases
- Only 1 received appropriate care and prevention
medications - 2 Mom tested after birth
- 2 No PNC, no meds
- 1 neonate start ZDV day 3
- 1 neonate no ZDV
- 2 c/s (1 non-elective, 1 unknown)
45Summary of Recent Perinatal Infections
2003-2004 Continued
- 3 Mom diagnosed before pregnancy
- - 3 No PNC, no meds
- - 1 neonate no ZDV, 1 unknown, 1 ZDV
- - 2 vaginal deliveries (1 home delivery)
- - 1 c/s 34 weeks type unknown
- 1 Mom diagnosed before pregnancy
- - PNC starting 7 months, non-adherent meds
- -elective c/s 38 weeks, ZDV LD, neonate day1
462005 Hospital Survey
- Collaborative effort NJHA UMDNJ
- Purpose evaluate implementation of standard of
care - Goal RT Short course therapy for women in
labor all hospitals - Self-administered survey
- Data collection June September 2005
472005 Hospital Survey Preliminary Data
- All 59 hospitals responded
- 56 (94.9) have a policy for documenting HIV
status in labor and delivery (LD) - 34 (57.6) have a policy for counseling women
with unknown HIV status in LD - 39 (66.1) have a policy for HIV testing
482005 Hospital Survey Preliminary Data Continued
- 56 (94.9) of responding hospitals have HIV
testing available in LD - 45 (76.3) do point-of-care testing in LD
- 40 (67.8) provide antiretroviral agents to the
mother in labor and to the newborn
49Major Missed Opportunities 2005
- Potentially preventable cases persist
- Lack of or inadequate prenatal care
- Lack of availability of counseling, rapid testing
and short course therapy at some New Jersey
hospitals that provide OB care - For maximal reduction need RT Short course
therapy at all OB hospitals
50Efforts to Decrease Missed Opportunities
- Target Population
- - Women in labor with ? HIV status
- - Women not in PNC
- Approach
- - Provider education
- - Facility TA
51Pregnant.
Are You HIV?
Find Out.
YOU CAN HELP Prevent HIV In Your Baby.
Call The NJ AIDS Hotline 1-800-624-2377.
Free HIV Test And Care During Pregnancy.
52Potential Adverse Outcomes
- Birth Defects
- Match HARS To Birth Defects
Registry - No Evidence Of Increased Incidence
- Cancer
-Match HARS To Cancer Registry
-No Evidence Of Increased Incidence - Current Studies Population-Based Approach
Through Registry Matching
53Potential Toxicities Mitochondrial Disease
- Primate Studies
- French Cohort
- 8/3,000 Children - US, Europe, Thailand, Africa
- 0/27,000 Children - Current Studies in New Jersey
- None Detected
54Summary
- Perinatal transmission decreased from 21 to 2
- Major missed opportunity NJ present in labor
HIV status unknown - Counseling, RT, short course Rx in labor
- Continue to use epidemiology to evaluate the
implementation and effectiveness of
recommendations - Goal maximal decrease vertical HIV transmission