| Literature DB >> 25224756 |
David Sando, Pascal Geldsetzer, Lucy Magesa, Irene Andrew Lema, Lameck Machumi, Mary Mwanyika-Sando, Nan Li, Donna Spiegelman, Ester Mungure, Hellen Siril, Phares Mujinja, Helga Naburi, Guerino Chalamilla, Charles Kilewo, Anna Mia Ekström, Wafaie W Fawzi, Till W Bärnighausen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mother-to-child transmission of HIV remains an important public health problem in sub-Saharan Africa. As HIV testing and linkage to PMTCT occurs in antenatal care (ANC), major challenges for any PMTCT option in developing countries, including Tanzania, are delays in the first ANC visit and a low overall number of visits. Community health workers (CHWs) have been effective in various settings in increasing the uptake of clinical services and improving treatment retention and adherence. At the beginning of this trial in January 2013, the World Health Organization recommended either of two medication regimens, Option A or B, for prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT). It is still largely unclear which option is more effective when implemented in a public healthcare system. This study aims to determine the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, acceptability, and feasibility of: (1) a community health worker (CWH) intervention and (2) PMTCT Option B in improving ANC and PMTCT outcomes. METHODS/Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25224756 PMCID: PMC4247663 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-15-359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Studies conducted in low-and middle-income countries, which achieved a six-month mother-to-child HIV transmission rate of ≤5%
| Country | Year | Participants | Maternal regimen | Infant regimen | Transmission rate at 6 months (95% confidence interval) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Botswana[ | 2006-2008 | 730 breastfeeding women1 | Triple ARVs from 28-34 weeks until cessation of breastfeeding2 | sd-NVP + AZT for 4 weeks | 1.1% (0.5%-2.2%) |
| Rwanda[ | 2005-2007 | Mothers of 227 breastfed and 305 formula-fed infants | Formula-feeding: triple ARVs from 28 weeks until birth. Breastfeeding: triple ARVs until cessation of breastfeeding2 | sd-NVP + AZT for 7 days | Breastfed: 1.8%3 (0.7%-4.8%) |
| Formula-fed: 1.0%3 (0.3%–3.0%) | |||||
| Mozambique[ | 2005-2007 | 341 breastfeeding mother-infant pairs | Triple ARVs from 15 weeks until cessation of breastfeeding2 | sd-NVP + AZT for 7 days | 2.1% |
| Mozambique, Malawi, and Tanzania[ | 2004-2006 | 809 formula-feeding women | Triple ARVs from 25 weeks until cessation of breastfeeding2 | sd-NVP + AZT for 7 days | 2.7% |
| Burkina Faso, Kenya, South Africa[ | 2005-2008 | Mothers of 805 infants4,5 | Group 1: triple ARVs from 28-36 weeks until cessation of breastfeeding2,6 | sd-NVP + AZT for 7 days | Group 1: 4.9% (3.1%-7.6%) |
| Group 2: AZT during pregnancy + sd-NVP and AZT at onset of labor7,8 | Group 2: 8.4% (6.0%-11.6%) | ||||
| Kenya[ | 2003-2009 | Mothers of 487 breastfed infants | Triple ARVs from 34-36 weeks until cessation of breastfeeding2 | sd-NVP | 5.0% (3.4%-7.4%) |
| Tanzania[ | 2004-2006 | Mothers of 441 breastfed infants | Triple ARVs from 34 weeks until cessation of breastfeeding2 | AZT + 3TC for 7 days | 5.0% (3.2%-7.0%) |
3TC, lamivudine; ARV, antiretroviral drugs; AZT, zidovudine; NVP, nevirapine; sd-NVP, single dose of nevirapine at birth.
1Of these 730 women, 560 had a CD4-count ≥200 cells/mm3 and 170 a CD4-count <200 cells/mm3 or an AIDS-defining illness.
2Women were advised to have concluded complete cessation of breastfeeding by 6 to 7 months postpartum, depending on the study.
3These are transmission rates at 9 months (not 6 months).
478% of infants born to women in each arm of the study were ever breastfed.
5This is the number of participants randomized at the beginning of the study.
6349 infants’ mothers were provided with this regimen.
7339 infants’ mothers were provided with this regimen.
8After a protocol amendment in 2006, women in the AZT arm also received AZT + 3TC 7 days postpartum.
Figure 1The randomization scheme of the trial.