Blackstock Oni J, Patel Viraj V, Felsen Uriel, Park Connie, Jain Sachin
a Division of General Internal Medicine , Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine , Bronx , USA.
b Division of Infectious Diseases , Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine , Bronx , USA.
AIDS Care. 2017 Jul;29(7):866-869. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2017.1286287. Epub 2017 Feb 1.
In the United States, heterosexual women account for 20% of new HIV infections. As a user-controlled HIV prevention method, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has substantial potential to reduce new infections among women. However, among women, PrEP is vastly underutilized. To guide efforts to increase women-at-risk's PrEP use, we sought to describe the characteristics of women prescribed PrEP as well as their retention in PrEP care. We conducted a chart review of women who received care at a comprehensive sexual health clinic within a large urban health care system. Referral sources included the health care system's clinics and HIV testing program, as well as local community-based organizations. From 1 December 2014 to 5 August 2016, 554 women received care at the clinic. During this period, 21 heterosexual women (3.8%) received at least one prescription for daily oral PrEP. For women prescribed PrEP, median age was 35 years old (range: 20-52). The majority (66.7%) were either Latina or non-Latina Black and most (81.2%) had public health insurance. The most common PrEP indication was being in a known sero-discordant partnership (85.7%). Of women in such partnerships, 83.3% reported their male partner was currently taking antiretroviral medications (ARVs) and 16.7% reported trying to conceive with their partner (not mutually exclusive). Of women with ARV-using partners, 66.7% reported that their partners were virally suppressed. Retention in PrEP care at three months was 61.1% and, at six months, 37.5%. Further study is necessary to expand PrEP to women whose risk factors extend beyond being in a known sero-discordant partnership, and to understand the reasons for the observed drop-off in PrEP care visits in real-world settings.
在美国,异性恋女性占新增艾滋病毒感染病例的20%。作为一种由用户控制的艾滋病毒预防方法,暴露前预防(PrEP)在减少女性新感染病例方面具有巨大潜力。然而,在女性中,PrEP的使用率极低。为了指导提高高危女性PrEP使用率的工作,我们试图描述开具PrEP处方的女性的特征以及她们接受PrEP治疗的持续性。我们对在一个大型城市医疗系统内的综合性性健康诊所接受治疗的女性进行了病历审查。转诊来源包括医疗系统的诊所和艾滋病毒检测项目,以及当地的社区组织。2014年12月1日至2016年8月5日,554名女性在该诊所接受治疗。在此期间,21名异性恋女性(3.8%)至少接受过一次每日口服PrEP的处方。开具PrEP处方的女性的中位年龄为35岁(范围:20 - 52岁)。大多数(66.7%)为拉丁裔或非拉丁裔黑人,且大多数(81.2%)拥有公共医疗保险。最常见的PrEP适应症是处于已知的血清学不一致关系中(85.7%)。在处于这种关系的女性中,83.3%报告其男性伴侣目前正在服用抗逆转录病毒药物(ARV),16.7%报告试图与伴侣受孕(并非相互排斥)。在伴侣使用ARV的女性中,66.7%报告其伴侣病毒得到抑制。PrEP治疗三个月时的持续性为61.1%,六个月时为37.5%。有必要进行进一步研究,将PrEP扩展到风险因素超出已知血清学不一致关系范围的女性,并了解在实际环境中观察到的PrEP就诊率下降的原因。