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Session 21
Oral Abstracts Pregnancy and Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission Thursday, 10 am - 12:30 pm Presentation Time: 12:00 pm 302-304 |
Background:
In many developing countries, breast-feeding
reduces the value of antenatal and peri-partum HIV
chemoprophylaxis interventions, but formula-feeding is often associated with
increased infant morbidity and mortality. Strategies to reduce postnatal HIV
transmission and extend HIV-free infant survival are desperately needed.
Methods: HIV+ pregnant women presenting for
antenatal care at 4 sites in Botswana were randomized to a partially double
blinded, 2x2 factorial clinical trial investigating several perinatal
interventions and infant feeding strategies to prevent mother-to-child HIV
transmission. We present the first planned final results from the feeding
strategy interventions in which all infants received 1 month zidovudine (ZDV) prophylaxis and either formula-feeding
(FF) or breast-feeding plus ZDV through 6 months (BF+ZDV). All mothers received
antenatal and intra-partum prophylaxis. The primary efficacy endpoints for the
feeding interventions were 7-month HIV positivity and
18-month HIV-free survival. Cumulative event rates were estimated from
Kaplan-Meier methods.
Results: Of the 1200 HIV+ women randomized,
591 infants assigned to FF and 588 to BF+ZDV were live-born. By 18 months, 86
infants had acquired HIV, 109 died, and 166 either acquired HIV or died.
Cumulative overall infant adverse event rates at 7 months were similar, except
for higher mortality in the FF arm (7.6% vs 3.7%, p
= 0.003); 9.2% in the BF+ZDV arm stopped ZDV for toxicity. The cumulative
7-month HIV positivity rates were 5.6% and 9.1% in
the FF and BF+ZDV arms, respectively (95% confidence interval for difference [BF+ZDV
– FF], 0.4 to 6.5%, p = 0.04]. The cumulative rates of HIV-free survival
at 18 months were 86% and 84% for FF and BF+ZDV arms, respectively (95% CI for
difference, –6.0 to 2.5%, p = 0.42). There was some evidence of a
quantitative interaction between feeding strategy and perinatal
intervention arms, with the FF advantage greater when mothers and infants
received single-dose NVP than when they did not.
Conclusions:
This is the first study to compare 2 different
types of intervention to prevent postnatal HIV transmission. The BF+ZDV arm had
higher HIV infection and lower mortality rates than the FF arm by 7 months and
comparable HIV-free survival rates by 18 months. While the application of these
results may differ depending on socioeconomic conditions and public health
infrastructure, high rates of HIV-free survival through 18 months of age were
achieved with both infant feeding strategies.
Keywords: prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV; infant feeding; antiretroviral prophylaxis
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