Even in Low-income Countries, ARVs Stop Maternal HIV Transmission

Pregnant with ultrasound image
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Antiretroviral drugs almost completely reduce the risk of mothers passing on HIV infection to their children, even in a low-income country with a high HIV incidence such as Tanzania, according to a new study in The Lancet HIV.

UNAIDS estimates that 11% of children born to HIV-positive mothers in Tanzania are infected with HIV, during childbirth or via breast milk. But the new study suggests this figure is actually much lower.

The researchers, from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, examined more than 13 000 HIV-positive, pregnant women, at several health centres in one of Africa’s largest cities, Dar es Salaam, in Tanzania. The women were offered antiviral treatment through maternity care between 2015 and 2017.

Only 159 infants were infected 

The women were followed for 18 months after giving birth when most of them had stopped breastfeeding. When the researchers examined the mothers’ children, they discovered that only 159 of the more than 13 000 infants had been infected with HIV by the age of 1.5 years, translating to a risk of 1.4%, taking into account a margin of error.

The risk of infection was more than twice as high among women who sought care late in pregnancy or had advanced HIV. Conversely, the risk of infection was only 0.9% in those who had already received HIV treatment when they became pregnant. 

“HIV transmission from mother to child can in principle be stopped completely with modern antiviral drugs. But so far it has not been demonstrated in low-income countries in Africa with a high incidence of HIV infection,” says Goodluck Willey Lyatuu, physician and postdoctoral researcher, also at the Department of Global Public Health at Karolinska Institutet and first author of the study.

Early diagnostics are important 

The study is limited by challenges that may be typical in low-resource health systems, such as incomplete follow-up and missing data, and that risk factors such as stigma linked to HIV are rarely or never routinely investigated.

“But it is one of the largest cohort studies published from Africa on the risk of HIV transmission from mother to child where the baby is followed until the end of the breastfeeding period,” says says Anna Mia Ekström, clinical professor of global infectious disease epidemiology with a focus on HIV at the Department of Global Public Health at Karolinska Institutet and corresponding author of the study.

Source: Karolinksa Institutet

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