Saidi Friday, Hosseinipour Mina C, Chi Benjamin H
UNC Project-Malawi, P. Bag A-104, Lilongwe, Malawi.
School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Curr HIV/AIDS Rep. 2025 Aug 15;22(1):44. doi: 10.1007/s11904-025-00751-2.
This review explores the promise and challenges of integrating long-acting antiretroviral agents-cabotegravir, lenacapavir, and cabotegravir-rilpivirine-into HIV prevention and treatment programs for pregnant and breastfeeding populations. It aims to examine current evidence, implementation experiences, and barriers to equitable access.
Emerging data support the efficacy and safety of long-acting agents during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Recent clinical trials have begun to include pregnant women by design, and national demonstration projects have successfully introduced injectable PrEP in maternal health settings. These developments signal growing recognition of the need for inclusive research and service delivery models. Long-acting antiretrovirals have the potential to transform maternal HIV prevention and treatment. However, challenges such as delayed inclusion in trials, policy constraints, limited product choice, high costs, and funding limitations persist. Addressing these gaps is critical to ensuring equitable access and informing future research and implementation strategies.
本综述探讨了将长效抗逆转录病毒药物(卡博特韦、来那卡韦和卡博特韦-利匹韦林)纳入针对孕妇和哺乳期人群的艾滋病毒预防和治疗方案的前景与挑战。其旨在审视当前证据、实施经验以及公平获取的障碍。
新出现的数据支持长效药物在孕期和哺乳期的有效性和安全性。近期临床试验已开始有意纳入孕妇,国家示范项目已在孕产妇健康环境中成功引入注射用暴露前预防药物。这些进展表明人们越来越认识到需要包容性的研究和服务提供模式。长效抗逆转录病毒药物有潜力改变孕产妇艾滋病毒的预防和治疗。然而,诸如试验纳入延迟、政策限制、产品选择有限、成本高昂以及资金限制等挑战依然存在。解决这些差距对于确保公平获取以及为未来的研究和实施策略提供信息至关重要。