학술논문

Targeted HIV testing at birth supported by low and predictable mother-to-child transmission risk in Botswana.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of the International AIDS Society. May2018, Vol. 21 Issue 5, p1-6. 6p. 1 Diagram, 3 Charts.
Subject
Language
ISSN
1758-2652
Abstract
Introduction Most African countries perform infant HIV testing at 6 weeks or later. The addition of targeted testing at birth may improve retention in care, treatment outcomes and survival for HIV ‐infected infants. Methods HIV ‐exposed infants were screened as part of the Early Infant Treatment (EIT ) study in Botswana. Screened infants were ≥35 weeks gestational age and ≥2000 g at birth. Risk factors for mother‐to‐child transmission (MTCT ) were assessed by maternal obstetric card or verbally. Risk factors included <8 weeks ART in pregnancy, last known CD 4 <250 cells/mm3, last known HIV RNA >400 copies/mL, poor maternal ART adherence, lack of maternal zidovudine (ZDV ) in labour, or lack of infant post‐exposure prophylaxis. Infants underwent dried blood spot testing by Roche Cobas Ampliprep/Cobas Taqman HIV ‐1 qualitative PCR . Results From April 2015 to April 2016, 2303 HIV ‐exposed infants were tested for HIV in the EIT study. Of these, 369 (16%) were identified as high risk for HIV infection by information available at birth, and 12 (0.5% overall, 3.25% of high risk) were identified as HIV positive at birth. All 12 positive infants were identified as high risk at the time of screening, and only 2 risk factors were required to identify all positive infants: either <8 weeks of maternal ART in pregnancy (75%) or lack of maternal HIV suppression at last test (25%). Conclusions In utero MTCT occurred only among infants identified as high risk at delivery, using information available from the mother or obstetric record. Birth testing that targets high‐risk infants based on maternal ART receipt is likely to identify the majority of in utero HIV transmissions, and allows early ART initiation for these infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]