Davies Natasha, Heffron Renee
Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, 22 Esselen Street, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Departments of Global Health and Epidemiology, University of Washington, 325 Ninth Avenue Box 359927, Seattle, WA 98104, USA.
Sex Health. 2018 Nov;15(6):501-512. doi: 10.1071/SH18067.
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a well-established biomedical HIV prevention strategy and recommended to reduce HIV risk during peri-conception, pregnancy and breastfeeding. Efforts are needed to translate global recommendations into national guidelines and implementation strategies. This article presents the current status of policy guidance for the use of PrEP during peri-conception, pregnancy and breastfeeding, with a particular focus on high prevalence countries, including those in sub-Saharan Africa. PrEP clinical guidelines released by ministries of health or other national-level health bodies, with a particular focus on recommendations for PrEP use during peri-conception, pregnancy and breastfeeding, were reviewed and summarised. Among countries with PrEP guidelines and/or policy, pregnancy is recognised as a period with increased HIV vulnerability, and some recommend PrEP use specifically during pregnancy. Only one country notes that PrEP is contraindicated during pregnancy, recognising a gap in complete safety data from women using PrEP throughout pregnancy. PrEP is not contraindicated as a peri-conception HIV prevention strategy in any country, but only three countries have specific guidance for peri-conception HIV prevention. Multiple barriers to the implementation of PrEP during pregnancy and breastfeeding are discussed, including barriers at the policy, health systems, social and personal levels. Although pregnancy is a period of heightened risk and fertility rates are high in many settings with high HIV burden, few PrEP policies have included guidance for PrEP use specific to peri-conception, pregnancy and breastfeeding periods. This gap can be overcome by the development or adoption of national clinical guidelines and implementation strategies from exemplary countries.
暴露前预防(PrEP)是一种成熟的生物医学HIV预防策略,建议在受孕前后、孕期及哺乳期降低HIV感染风险。需要做出努力将全球建议转化为国家指南和实施策略。本文介绍了受孕前后、孕期及哺乳期使用PrEP的政策指导现状,特别关注包括撒哈拉以南非洲国家在内的高流行率国家。对各国卫生部或其他国家级卫生机构发布的PrEP临床指南进行了审查和总结,尤其关注受孕前后、孕期及哺乳期使用PrEP的建议。在有PrEP指南和/或政策的国家中,孕期被认为是HIV易感性增加的时期,一些国家特别建议在孕期使用PrEP。只有一个国家指出孕期使用PrEP存在禁忌,因为认识到缺乏孕期全程使用PrEP的女性完整安全性数据。没有任何国家将PrEP作为受孕前后HIV预防策略列为禁忌,但只有三个国家有针对受孕前后HIV预防的具体指导。文中讨论了孕期及哺乳期实施PrEP的多重障碍,包括政策、卫生系统、社会和个人层面的障碍。尽管孕期是风险增加的时期,且在许多HIV负担高的地区生育率也很高,但很少有PrEP政策包含针对受孕前后、孕期及哺乳期使用PrEP的指导。通过制定或采用示范国家的国家临床指南和实施策略可以克服这一差距。