Noel Francine, Mehta Sapna, Zhu Yuwei, Rouzier Patricia De Matteis, Marcelin Abdias, Shi Jian R, Nolte Claudine, Severe Linda, Deschamps Marie Marcelle, Fitzgerald Daniel W, Johnson Warren D, Wright Peter F, Pape Jean W
Les Centres GHESKIO, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
PLoS One. 2008;3(11):e3723. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0003723. Epub 2008 Nov 14.
Since 1999 GHESKIO, a large voluntary counseling and HIV testing center in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, has had an ongoing collaboration with the Haitian Ministry of Health to reduce the rate of mother to child HIV transmission. There are limited data on the ability to administer complex regimens for reducing mother to child transmission and on risk factors for continued transmission and infant mortality within programmatic settings in developing countries.
We analyzed data from 551 infants born to HIV-infected mothers seen at GHESKIO, between 1999 and 2005. HIV-infected mothers and their infants were given "short-course" monotherapy with antiretrovirals for prophylaxis; and, since 2003, highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) when clinical or laboratory indications were met. Infected women seen in the pre-treatment era had 27% transmission rates, falling to 10% in this cohort of 551 infants, and to only 1.9% in infants of women on HAART. Mortality rate after HAART introduction (0.12 per year of follow-up [0.08-0.16]) was significantly lower than the period before the availability of such therapy (0.23 [0.16-0.30], P<0.0001). The effects of maternal health, infant feeding, completeness of prophylaxis, and birth weight on mortality and transmission were determined using univariate and multivariate analysis. Infant HIV-1 infection and low birth weight were associated with infant mortality in less than 15 month olds in multivariate analysis.
Our findings demonstrate success in prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission and mortality in a highly resource constrained setting. Elements contributing to programmatic success include provision of HAART in the context of a comprehensive program with pre and postnatal care for both mother and infant.
自1999年以来,海地太子港的大型自愿咨询与艾滋病毒检测中心GHESKIO一直与海地卫生部合作,以降低母婴艾滋病毒传播率。在发展中国家的项目环境中,关于实施降低母婴传播的复杂方案的能力以及持续传播和婴儿死亡的风险因素的数据有限。
我们分析了1999年至2005年期间在GHESKIO就诊的551名感染艾滋病毒母亲所生婴儿的数据。感染艾滋病毒的母亲及其婴儿接受了抗逆转录病毒药物的“短疗程”单药治疗以进行预防;自2003年起,在满足临床或实验室指征时给予高效抗逆转录病毒治疗(HAART)。在治疗前时期就诊的感染妇女的传播率为27%,在这551名婴儿的队列中降至10%,而在接受HAART治疗的妇女所生婴儿中仅为1.9%。引入HAART后的死亡率(每年随访0.12[0.08 - 0.16])显著低于有此类治疗之前的时期(0.23[0.16 - 0.30],P<0.0001)。使用单变量和多变量分析确定了孕产妇健康、婴儿喂养、预防的完整性以及出生体重对死亡率和传播的影响。在多变量分析中,婴儿HIV - 1感染和低出生体重与15个月以下婴儿的死亡率相关。
我们的研究结果表明,在资源高度受限的环境中,预防母婴艾滋病毒传播和死亡率方面取得了成功。促成项目成功的因素包括在为母婴提供产前和产后护理的综合项目背景下提供HAART。