| Literature DB >> 24052879 |
Fatch W Kalembo1, Maggie Zgambo.
Abstract
Purpose. The purpose of this paper was to explore how loss to followup (LFTU) has affected the successful implementation of prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV-1 (PMTCT) programs in sub-Saharan Africa. Methods. We conducted an electronic search from the following databases PubMed, ScienceDirect, Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJs), and PyscINFO. Additional searches were made in WHO, UNAIDS, UNICEF, Google, and Google scholar websites for (1) peer-reviewed published research, (2) scientific and technical reports, and (3) papers presented on scientific conferences. Results. A total of 678 articles, published from 1990 to 2011, were retrieved. Only 44 articles met our inclusion criteria and were included in the study. The rates of LTFU of mother-child pairs ranged from 19% to 89.4 in the reviewed articles. Health facility factors, fear of HIV-1 test, stigma and discrimination, home deliveries and socioeconomic factors were identified as reasons for LTFU. Conclusion. There is a great loss of mother-child pairs to follow up in PMTCT programs in sub-Saharan Africa. There is need for more research studies to develop public health models of care that can help to improve followup of mother-child pairs in PMTCT programs in Sub-Saharan Africa.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24052879 PMCID: PMC3767368 DOI: 10.5402/2012/589817
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN AIDS ISSN: 2090-939X
Summary of studies on rates of LTFU in PMTCT program in sub-Saharan Africa.
| First author | Design | Study population | Country | Method | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manzi, 2005 [ | Cohort study | 646 HIV-positive pregnant women | Malawi | Review of routine antenatal, VCT and PMTCT registers | The cumulative LTFU was 358 (55%, CI: 51–59) by the 36-week antenatal visit, 440 (68%, CI: 64–71) by delivery, 450 (70%, CI: 66–73) by the first postnatal visit, and 524 (81%, CI: 78–84) by the 6-month postnatal visit |
| Mirkuzie, 2010 [ | Descriptive retrospective study | 135,986 HIV-positive women. | Ethiopia | Review of PMTCT monthly reports | 10.6% (896) (95% CI 9.9–11.2) of the HIV-positive women completed their followup to child HIV testing |
| Stringer, 2005 [ | Surveillance study | 8787 mother-infant pairs | Zambia | Mother-infant pairs surveillance | 675 of 2257 (30%) seropositive mother-infant pairs received both maternal and infant dose of NVP |
| Sherman, 2004 [ | Descriptive retrospective study | 1234 HIV-positive mothers and their exposed infants | South Africa | Assessment of the efficacy (PMTCT) program | 70% LTFU by 4 months postnatally |
| Perez, 2004 [ | Cross-sectional study | 2298 pregnant women | Zimbabwe | Monitoring of PMTCT Program uptake | 104 (24%) mother-child pairs received nevirapine prophylaxis |
| Kasenga, 2007 [ | Descriptive retrospective study | 75 HIV-positive women | Malawi | Followup of HIV-positive women registered in PMTCT program | 35 (47%) LTFU by delivery |
| Nyandiko, 2010 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 2477 HIV-exposed infants | Kenya | Comparing MTCT and infant survival rates | 329 (27.4%) LTFU by 18 months of age |
| Kurewa, 2007 [ | Nested case control | 594 HIV-negative and 456 HIV positive mothers | Zimbabwe | Comparison between HIV-negative and HIV-positive mothers. | At 9 months the overall dropout rate was 19% |
| Chetty, 2011 [ | Retrospective cohort | 268 HIV-exposed infants | South Africa | Postnatal followup of data abstracted from patients records | 105/260 (40.4%) infants lost to followup |
| Mirkuzie, 2011 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 282 HIV-positive mothers | Ethiopia | Followup of mother-infant pairs | 115 (48%) mother-infant pairs LTFU by 6 weeks postnatally |
| Doherty, 2005 [ | Cross-sectional study. | 14340 HIV-positive women and their HIV-exposed children | South Africa | Monthly data collection on PMTCT outcomes | 50% mother-child pairs LTFU by 12 months postnatally |
| Msellati, 2001 [ | Routine PMTCT data collection and analysis | 445 positive pregnant women | Ivory Coast | Routine collection of PMTCT data | 177/445 (40%) of HIV-positive women lost to followup by the end of 6 months |
| van Lettow, 2011 [ | Matched cohort study | 173 HIV-infected and 214 HIV-uninfected mother-child pairs | Malawi | Followup of mother-infant pairs | 28% of exposed infants were followed and tested at least once by 18–20 months of age, and only 18% of mothers followed all current PMTCT recommendations |
|
Rosen, 2011 [ | Cross-sectional study | 113 HIV-positive pregnant women | Ethiopia | Interview and focus group discussion | 71 (95.9%) of HIV-infected women were lost to followup by delivery |
| Kurewa, 2011 [ | Cohort study | 479 HIV-exposed infants | Zimbabwe | Followup of HIV-exposed infants | 247 (51.6%) exposed infants turned up in the first year |
| Moth, 2005 [ | A cross-sectional exploratory study | 133 clients registered for PMTCT services | Kenya | Review of logbooks, exit interviews, indepth interviews, nonparticipant observations, and testimonies on experiences | LTFU was 11% before pretest counseling, 23.5% during HIV test, 31.5% during collection of HIV result, 53.6% during enrollment, and 80.7% at delivery |
|
Mute, 2011 [ | Cross-sectional survey | of 230 HIV-positive pregnant | Mali | Questionnaire and semistructure interviews | LTFU was 53% (122) of HIV-positive women |
| Moses, 2008 [ | Retrospective study | 20,000 HIV-positive pregnant women | Malawi | followup of mother and infant pair | 35% of the infected mothers returned with their babies at 6-week postnatal followup. |