학술논문

Comparison of guidelines for HIV viral load monitoring among pregnant and breastfeeding women in sub-Saharan Africa.
Document Type
article
Source
AIDS. 34(2)
Subject
Infectious Diseases
Prevention
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
Infection
Reproductive health and childbirth
Africa South of the Sahara
Anti-HIV Agents
Breast Feeding
Female
Fertilization
HIV Infections
Humans
Infectious Disease Transmission
Vertical
Monte Carlo Method
Postpartum Period
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Complications
Infectious
Serologic Tests
Viral Load
antiretroviral therapy
HIV
mathematical model
pregnancy
simulation
viral load monitoring
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Virology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundIntensified viral load monitoring for pregnant and breastfeeding women has been proposed to help address concerns around antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence, viraemia and transmission risk, but there have been no systematic evaluations of existing policies.MethodsWe used an individual Monte Carlo simulation to describe longitudinal ART adherence and viral load from conception until 2 years' postpartum. We applied national and international guidelines for viral load monitoring to the simulated data. We compared guidelines on the percentage of women receiving viral load monitoring and the percentage of women monitored at the time of elevated viral load.ResultsCoverage of viral load monitoring in pregnancy and breastfeeding varied markedly, with between 14% and 100% of women monitored antenatally and 38-98% monitored during breastfeeding. Specific recommendations for testing at either a fixed gestation or a short, fixed period after ART initiation achieved more than 95% testing in pregnancy but this was much lower (14-83%) among guidelines with no special stipulations. By the end of breastfeeding, only a small proportion of simulated episodes of elevated viral load more than 1000 copies/ml were successfully detected by monitoring (range, 20-50%).DiscussionAlthough further research is needed to understand optimal viral load frequency and timing in this population, these results suggest that current policies yield suboptimal detection of elevated viral load in pregnant and breastfeeding women.