| Literature DB >> 31647824 |
Santiago Jiménez de Ory1, José Tomas Ramos2, Claudia Fortuny3, María Isabel González-Tomé4, Maria José Mellado5,6, David Moreno7,8, César Gavilán9,10, Ana Isabel Menasalvas11, Ana Isabel Piqueras12, M Antoinette Frick13,14,15, Maria Angeles Muñoz-Fernández16,17, Maria Luisa Navarro18.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are not enough nationwide studies on perinatal HIV transmission in connection with a combination of antiretroviral treatments in Spain. Our objectives were to study sociodemographic changes and trends in the rates of HIV diagnoses and perinatal transmission in Spain from 1997 to 2015.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31647824 PMCID: PMC6812742 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223536
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow-chart for the selection of HIV-infected children diagnosed in Spain from 1997 to 2015.
Sociodemographic, clinical, immunological and virological profile of the HIV-infected children at diagnosis, by origin of the children.
| Spanish | Immigrants | |
|---|---|---|
| N = 406 | N = 126 | |
| 1997–2000 | 191 (47) | 12 (9.5) |
| 2001–2005 | 118 (29.1) | 31 (24.6) |
| 2006–2010 | 73 (18) | 57 (45.2) |
| 2011–2015 | 24 (5.9) | 26 (20.6) |
| Male | 187 (46.1) | 64 (50.8) |
| Female | 219 (53.9) | 62 (49.2) |
| Perinatal | 387 (95.3) | 89 (70.6) |
| Transfusional | 3 (0.7) | 11 (8.7) |
| Sexual | 6 (1.5) | 10 (7.9) |
| Unknown (mother not HIV infected) | 10 (2.5) | 2 (1.6) |
| Unknown (HIV mother status not known) | 0 (0) | 14 (11.1) |
| N = 402 | N = 125 | |
| N-A | 267 (66.4) | 61 (48.8) |
| B | 78 (19.4) | 31 (24.8) |
| C | 57 (14.2) | 33 (26.4) |
| HCV | 12 (3) | 1 (0.8) |
| HBV | 0 (0) | 9 (7.1) |
| N = 346 | N = 119 | |
| 28 (15.2–40) | 17 (8.3–24.7) | |
| N = 348 | N = 119 | |
| 1176 (465–2185) | 547 (213–1036) | |
| N = 354 | N = 118 | |
| 5.2 (4.6–5.9) | 5.1 (4.5–5.7) |
Sociodemographic, clinical, immunological and virological profile at diagnosis of perinatally HIV-infected children born in Spain and their mothers, by calendar periods.
| 1997–2000 | 2001–2005 | 2006–2010 | 2011–2015 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N = 174 | N = 115 | N = 65 | N = 19 | |
| Spanish | 163 (93.7) | 95 (82.6) | 32 (49.2) | 9 (47.4) |
| Immigrants | 11 (6.3) | 20 (17.4) | 33 (50.8) | 10 (52.6) |
| Until childbirth | 89 (51.1) | 47 (40.9) | 36 (55.4) | 10 (52.6) |
| After childbirth | 85 (48.9) | 68 (59.1) | 29 (44.6) | 9 (47.4) |
| N = 163 | N = 110 | N = 61 | N = 18 | |
| IDU | 90 (55.2) | 47 (42.7) | 11 (18) | 2 (11.1) |
| No history of IDU | 73 (44.8) | 63 (57.3) | 50 (82) | 16 (88.9) |
| Male | 71 (40.8) | 60 (52.2) | 29 (44.6) | 8 (42.1) |
| Female | 103 (59.2) | 55 (47.8) | 36 (55.4) | 11 (57.9) |
| <1 year | 109 (62.6) | 74 (64.3) | 45 (69.2) | 13 (68.4) |
| 1–5 years | 51 (29.3) | 25 (21.7) | 15 (23.1) | 4 (21.1) |
| >5 years | 14 (8) | 16 (13.9) | 5 (7.7) | 2 (10.5) |
| HCV | 9 (5.2) | 2 (1.7) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| HBV | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| N = 169 | N = 113 | N = 65 | N = 19 | |
| N-A | 87 (51.4) | 71 (62.8) | 47 (72.3) | 17 (89.5) |
| B | 41 (24.3) | 26 (23) | 9 (13.8) | 1 (5.3) |
| C | 41 (24.3) | 16 (14.2) | 9 (13.8) | 1 (5.3) |
| N = 148 | N = 99 | N = 63 | N = 19 | |
| 27.4 (16–36) | 27 (13.9–40.5) | 31.7 (21–46) | 36 (27.5–44.9) | |
| N = 149 | N = 99 | N = 63 | N = 19 | |
| 1192 (439–2126) | 1145 (578–2126) | 1775 (691–2963) | 1489 (935–2567) | |
| N = 153 | N = 99 | N = 63 | N = 18 | |
| 5.5 (4.9–6.1) | 5.2 (4.7–5.7) | 5.2 (4.2–5.9) | 5.1 (4.5–5.7) |
Fig 2Rate of new perinatal HIV diagnoses in children born in Spain from 1997 to 2015.
Fig 3Proportion of childbirths from HIV-infected mothers in respect to total childbirths.
Fig 4Rate of perinatal HIV transmission from 1997 to 2015.