Dettinger Julia C, Kinuthia John, Pintye Jillian, Mwongeli Nancy, Gómez Laurén, Richardson Barbra A, Barnabas Ruanne, Wagner Anjuli D, O'Malley Gabrielle, Baeten Jared M, John-Stewart Grace
Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Department of Research and Programs, Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi, Kenya.
BMJ Open. 2019 Mar 7;9(3):e025122. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025122.
Women in regions with high HIV prevalence are at high risk of HIV acquisition during pregnancy and postpartum, and acute maternal HIV contributes a substantial proportion of infant HIV infections. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) could prevent HIV during pregnancy/postpartum; however, identifying women who would most benefit from PrEP in this period is challenging. Women may not perceive risk, may not know partner HIV status and partners may have external partners during this period. PrEP offer in pregnancy could be universal or risk guided.
The PrEP Implementation for Mothers in Antenatal Care (PrIMA) study is a cluster randomised trial that aims to determine the best model for PrEP implementation in pregnancy, among women attending public sector maternal child health clinics in Western Kenya (HIV prevalence >25%). Twenty clinics are randomised to either universal PrEP offer following standardised counselling ('Universal arm' 10 clinics) or risk screening with partner self-test option ('Targeted arm' 10 clinics). Four thousand women will be enrolled and followed through 9-month postpartum. The primary analysis will be intention to treat. Outcomes reflect the balance between HIV preventive effectiveness and avoiding unnecessary PrEP exposure to women at low risk and include: maternal HIV incidence, PrEP uptake, PrEP adherence, PrEP duration, 'appropriate' PrEP use (among women with objective evidence of potential risk), infant birth outcomes, infant growth and partner self-testing uptake. To better understand the feasibility and acceptability of the provision of PrEP in these settings, qualitative interviews and cost-effectiveness analyses will be conducted.
The protocol was approved by the institutional review boards at Kenyatta National Hospital and the University of Washington. An external advisory panel monitors adverse and social harm events. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals, presentations at local and international conferences to national and global policy makers, community and participants.
NCT03070600.
在艾滋病毒高流行地区,女性在孕期和产后感染艾滋病毒的风险很高,急性孕产妇艾滋病毒感染在婴儿艾滋病毒感染中占很大比例。暴露前预防(PrEP)可预防孕期/产后的艾滋病毒感染;然而,确定在此期间最能从PrEP中获益的女性具有挑战性。女性可能没有意识到风险,可能不知道伴侣的艾滋病毒感染状况,而且伴侣在此期间可能有其他性伴侣。孕期提供PrEP可以是普遍提供或基于风险指导。
产前护理中母亲的PrEP实施(PrIMA)研究是一项整群随机试验,旨在确定在肯尼亚西部(艾滋病毒流行率>25%)公共部门母婴健康诊所就诊的女性中,孕期实施PrEP的最佳模式。20家诊所被随机分为两组,一组是在标准化咨询后普遍提供PrEP(“普遍组”,10家诊所),另一组是采用伴侣自我检测选项进行风险筛查(“目标组”,10家诊所)。将招募4000名女性,并随访至产后9个月。主要分析将采用意向性分析。结果反映了艾滋病毒预防效果与避免对低风险女性进行不必要的PrEP暴露之间的平衡,包括:孕产妇艾滋病毒发病率、PrEP使用率、PrEP依从性、PrEP持续时间、“适当”使用PrEP(在有潜在风险客观证据的女性中)、婴儿出生结局、婴儿生长情况以及伴侣自我检测使用率。为了更好地了解在这些环境中提供PrEP的可行性和可接受性,将进行定性访谈和成本效益分析。
该方案已获得肯雅塔国家医院和华盛顿大学机构审查委员会的批准。一个外部咨询小组监测不良事件和社会危害事件。研究结果将通过同行评审期刊、在地方和国际会议上向国家和全球政策制定者、社区及参与者进行汇报加以传播。
NCT03070600。