| Literature DB >> 26754155 |
Hermine L Nguena Nguefack1, Henri Gwet2, Sophie Desmonde3,4, Odile Ouwe Missi Oukem-Boyer5,6, Céline Nkenfou7, Mathurin Téjiokem8, Patrice Tchendjou9, Irénée Domkam10, Valériane Leroy11,12,13, Ahmadou Alioum14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the progress in the Prevention of the Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT), the paediatric HIV epidemic remains worrying in Cameroon. HIV prevalence rate for the population of pregnant women was 7.6% in 2010 in Cameroon. The extent of the paediatric HIV epidemic is needed to inform policymakers. We developed a stochastic simulation model to estimate the number of new paediatric HIV infections through MTCT based on the observed uptake of services during the different steps of the PMTCT cascade in Cameroon in 2011. Different levels of PMTCT uptake was also assessed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26754155 PMCID: PMC4709976 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1336-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Pregnant women population groups and model key parameters according to the observed data in the different age groups
| Age groups (years) | 15–49 | 15–19 | 20–24 | 25–29 | 30–34 | 35–39 | 40–44 | 45–49 | Data source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of pregnant women expected | 995, 533 | 231, 982 | 202, 093 | 173, 223 | 125, 437 | 108, 513 | 80, 638 | 73, 647 | Cameroon [ |
| HIV prevalence, % | 5.6 | 2.0 | 3.4 | 7.6 | 7.3 | 10.0 | 7.1 | 6.4 | Cameroon [ |
| Access to Antenatal Care), % | 36.5 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| Prenatal HIV testing, % | 29.3 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| Receipt of maternal HIV test result, % | 92.4 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| Mortality during pregnancy, % | 4 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| Live birth among HIV uninfected women, % | 95 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| Live birth among HIV infected women, % | 94.6 | 72.7 | 68.9 | 63.3 | 58.4 | 52.0 | 51.9 | [ | |
| ARV prophylactic coverage for HIV infected pregnant women, % | 20.3 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| CD4 cell count quantification for HIV infected women, % | 6.9 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| Pregnant women ART eligible in ANC, % | 60 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| ART coverage for eligible women in ANC, % | 25 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| HIV MTCT rate at 6-week in the absence of MTCT, % | 22 | Sub-saharan Africa [ | |||||||
| Treatment Effectiveness Expected | [ | ||||||||
| -Short course ARV (% reduction) | 86.7 | ||||||||
| -Long course ARV/ ART (% reduction) | 93.7 | ||||||||
| Rate of breastfeeding exposure among HIV exposed children known at birth (%) | 46 | Cameroon, Pediacama 1, CIRCB field studiesb | |||||||
| Rate of breastfeeding exposure among children not known to be HIV exposed at birth, (%) | 97 | Cameron [ | |||||||
| Intra-partum incidence of HIV infection (per 100 woman-year of follow-up), % | 2 | 2 | 1.6 | 1.3 | 1 | 0.6 | 0.6 | Sub-saharan Africa [ | |
| Incident HIV infections among lactating women, % | 2.0 | Zimbabwe [ | |||||||
| Proportion of children still exposed to breastfeeding (age in months), % | Cameroon [ | ||||||||
| [0,2[ | 97.5 | ||||||||
| [2,4[ | 98.9 | ||||||||
| [4,6[ | 96.0 | ||||||||
| [6,9[ | 95.9 | ||||||||
| [9,12[ | 90.5 | ||||||||
| [12,18[ | 70.2 | ||||||||
| [18, 24] | 29.5 | ||||||||
| Rate of exclusive breastfeeding among non HIV exposed children (age in months), % | Cameroon [ | ||||||||
| [0,2[ | 31.2 | ||||||||
| [2,4[ | 23.0 | ||||||||
| [4,6[ | 10.6 | ||||||||
| [6,9[ | 1.9 | ||||||||
| [9,12[ | 0.8 | ||||||||
| [12,18[ | 0.7 | ||||||||
| [18, 24] | 0.0 | ||||||||
| Rate of exclusive breastfeeding among HIV exposed children (age in months), % | Cameroon, | ||||||||
| Pediacama 1, CIRCB field studiesb | |||||||||
| [0,2[ | 86.6 | ||||||||
| [2,6[ | 75.9 | ||||||||
| [6,12[ | 50.4 | ||||||||
| [12, 18] | 0.0 | ||||||||
| Proportion of HIV exposed children who received postnatal ART, % | 9.2 | Cameroon [ | |||||||
| Rate of mother’s retention in ART treatment after delivery | Sub-saharan Africa [ | ||||||||
| [0,6[ | 79.1 | ||||||||
| [6,12[ | 75.0 | ||||||||
| [12, 24] | 61.6 | ||||||||
ANC antenatal care, ART antiretroviral therapy, ARV antiretroviral, MTCT mother-to-child transmission; aPediacam is a multisite cohort study started in Cameroon in November 2007 with two main objectives: to study the feasibility and effectiveness, of early antiretroviral multi-therapy offered systematically to HIV-infected infants before 7 months of age; and to evaluate the humoral response of these children to vaccines of the Expanded Program of Immunization; bUnpublished Early Infant Diagnosis of HIV data located at CIRCB
Fig. 1PMTCT cascade. This figure shows the different state between pregnancy and delivery, then delivery and breastfeeding cessation, including PMTCT services offering: gray colour highlights the missed opportunities in the PMTCT process. Each oval represents a maternal health state, rounded rectangle represents child health state and rectangle represents clinical events and breastfeeding practices
Range of Model parameters for sensitivity analyses (results expressed in %)
| Key parameters | Base case value | Range for sensitivity analyses | Data sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| Access to ANC | 36.5 | 36–85 | [ |
| HIV testing in ANC | 80.1 | 80–100 | [ |
| ARV prophylactic coverage in ANC for HIV-infected women | 67 | 50–74 | [ |
| CD4 cell count quantification for infected women in ANC | 22.9 | 22–100 | [ |
| ART eligible in ANC | 60 | 40–60 | [ |
| ART coverage for eligible women in ANC | 25 | 25–32 | [ |
| Natural history of HIV MTCT at birth | 22 | 15–25 | [ |
| Treatment Effectiveness | [ | ||
| -Short course ARV (reduction) | 86.7 | 86–95 | |
| -Long course ARV/ ART (reduction) | 93.7 | 93–95 | |
| Incidence rate among postpartum lactating women | 2.0 | 0.2–3.8 | [ |
ANC antenatal care, ART antiretroviral therapy, ARV antiretroviral treatment, MTCT mother-to-child transmission
Simulated MTCT rates of HIV in prevalent and incident maternal population according to the observed coverage of PMTCT services in Cameroon in 2011
| MTCT circumstances | Estimated number of incident paediatric infections [95 % Confidence Interval] | Estimated transmission rate (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Prevalent HIV-infected pregnant women | ||
| Perinatal rate (<6 weeks of age) | 3, 758 [3, 033–5, 077] | 12.1 [8.8–15.1] |
| Postnatal rate (>6 weeks of age to 24 months) | 3, 484 [2, 687–5, 286] | 13.3 [9.3–17.8] |
| Postnatal rate among incident maternal infection during breastfeeding | 3, 161 [2, 337–4, 679] | 20.8 [14.1–26.9] |
| Total | 10, 403 [9, 054–13, 345] | 22.1 [18.6–25.2] |
MTCT mother-to-child transmission, PMTCT prevention of mother-to-child transmission
Simulated scenarios of MTCT rates of HIV in prevalent maternal population according to the fixed coverage of PMTCT services in Cameroon in 2011
| 100 % of PMTCT services coverage | ||
|---|---|---|
| MTCT circumstances | Estimated number of incident paediatric infections [95 % Confidence Interval] | Estimated transmission rate (%) |
| Perinatal rate (<6 weeks of age) | 165 [99–398] | 0.4 [0.2–1.1] |
| Postnatal rate (>6 weeks of age to 24 months) | 149 [99–298] | 0.8 [0.5–1.6] |
| Total | 316 [198–631] | 0.9 [0.5–1.7] |
| 90 % of PMTCT services coverage | ||
| Perinatal rate (<6 weeks of age) | 509 [199–995] | 1.4 [0.5–2.8] |
| Postnatal rate (>6 weeks of age to 24 months) | 205 [99–497] | 1.3 [0.5–3.0] |
| Total | 711 [306–1, 187] | 2.0 [0.9–3.2] |
| 80 % of PMTCT services coverage | ||
| Perinatal rate (<6 weeks of age) | 1, 150 [497–1, 891] | 3.3 [1.3–5.6] |
| Postnatal rate (>6 weeks of age to 24 months) | 342 [99–696] | 2.1 [0.6–4.4] |
| Total | 1, 505 [895–2, 354] | 4.3 [2.4–6.7] |
MTCT mother-to-child transmission PMTCT prevention of mother-to-child transmission