Nduati R, John G, Mbori-Ngacha D, Richardson B, Overbaugh J, Mwatha A, Ndinya-Achola J, Bwayo J, Onyango F E, Hughes J, Kreiss J
Department of Paediatrics, University of Nairobi, Kenya.
JAMA. 2000 Mar 1;283(9):1167-74. doi: 10.1001/jama.283.9.1167.
Transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is known to occur through breastfeeding, but the magnitude of risk has not been precisely defined. Whether breast milk HIV-1 transmission risk exceeds the potential risk of formula-associated diarrheal mortality in developing countries is unknown.
To determine the frequency of breast milk transmission of HIV-1 and to compare mortality rates and HIV-1-free survival in breastfed and formula-fed infants.
Randomized clinical trial conducted from November 1992 to July 1998 in antenatal clinics in Nairobi, Kenya, with a median follow-up period of 24 months.
Of 425 HIV-1-seropositive, antiretroviral-naive pregnant women enrolled, 401 mother-infant pairs were included in the analysis of trial end points.
Mother-infant pairs were randomized to breastfeeding (n = 212) vs formula feeding arms (n = 213).
Infant HIV-1 infection and death during the first 2 years of life, compared between the 2 intervention groups.
Compliance with the assigned feeding modality was 96% in the breastfeeding arm and 70% in the formula arm (P<.001). Median duration of breastfeeding was 17 months. Of the 401 infants included in the analysis, 94% were followed up to HIV-1 infection or mortality end points: 83% for the HIV-1 infection end point and 93% to the mortality end point. The cumulative probability of HIV-1 infection at 24 months was 36.7% (95% confidence interval [CI], 29.4%-44.0%) in the breastfeeding arm and 20.5% (95% CI, 14.0%-27.0%) in the formula arm (P = .001). The estimated rate of breast milk transmission was 16.2% (95% CI, 6.5%-25.9%). Forty-four percent of HIV-1 infection in the breastfeeding arm was attributable to breast milk. Most breast milk transmission occurred early, with 75% of the risk difference between the 2 arms occurring by 6 months, although transmission continued throughout the duration of exposure. The 2-year mortality rates in both arms were similar (breastfeeding arm, 24.4% [95% CI, 18.2%-30.7%] vs formula feeding arm, 20.0% [95% CI, 14.4%-25.6%]; P = .30). The rate of HIV-1-free survival at 2 years was significantly lower in the breastfeeding arm than in the formula feeding arm (58.0% vs 70.0%, respectively; P = .02).
The frequency of breast milk transmission of HIV-1 was 16.2% in this randomized clinical trial, and the majority of infections occurred early during breastfeeding. The use of breast milk substitutes prevented 44% of infant infections and was associated with significantly improved HIV-1-free survival.
已知1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)可通过母乳喂养传播,但风险程度尚未精确界定。在发展中国家,母乳传播HIV-1的风险是否超过配方奶相关腹泻死亡率的潜在风险尚不清楚。
确定HIV-1的母乳传播频率,并比较母乳喂养和配方奶喂养婴儿的死亡率及无HIV-1存活情况。
1992年11月至1998年7月在肯尼亚内罗毕的产前诊所进行的随机临床试验,中位随访期为24个月。
在425名HIV-1血清阳性、未接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的孕妇中,401对母婴被纳入试验终点分析。
母婴对被随机分为母乳喂养组(n = 212)和配方奶喂养组(n = 213)。
比较两组干预措施下婴儿在出生后2年内的HIV-1感染和死亡情况。
母乳喂养组对指定喂养方式的依从率为96%,配方奶喂养组为70%(P <.001)。母乳喂养的中位持续时间为17个月。在纳入分析的401名婴儿中,94%被随访至HIV-1感染或死亡终点:83%达到HIV-1感染终点,93%达到死亡终点。母乳喂养组在24个月时HIV-1感染的累积概率为36.7%(95%置信区间[CI],29.4% - 44.0%),配方奶喂养组为20.5%(95% CI,14.0% - 27.0%)(P =.001)。估计的母乳传播率为16.2%(95% CI,6.5% - 25.9%)。母乳喂养组44%的HIV-1感染归因于母乳。大多数母乳传播发生在早期,两组之间75%的风险差异在6个月时出现,尽管在整个暴露期间传播仍在继续。两组的2年死亡率相似(母乳喂养组,24.4%[95% CI,18.2% - 30.7%] vs配方奶喂养组,20.0%[95% CI,14.4% - 25.6%];P =.30)。母乳喂养组2年时的无HIV-1存活率显著低于配方奶喂养组(分别为58.0%和70.0%;P =.02)。
在这项随机临床试验中,HIV-1的母乳传播频率为16.2%,大多数感染发生在母乳喂养早期。使用母乳替代品可预防44%的婴儿感染,并与显著改善的无HIV-1存活率相关。