News

Featured news from NHIVNA

HIV-related news from NAM

Pregnancy doubled risk of female-to-male HIV transmission in Partners in Prevention study
Carole Leach-Lemens, 2011-08-05 08:50:00

Pregnancy increased the risks of female-to-male HIV transmission two-fold among over 3300 serodiscordant couples from seven African countries Nelly R Mugo and colleagues reported in a prospective study published in the advance online edition of AIDS.

The risks of becoming infected with HIV during pregnancy increased at the same rate. However, this was partly explained by other factors including unprotected sex.

Women now account for 60% of HIV infections in adults in sub-Saharan Africa. Many African countries with high HIV prevalence also have high fertility rates and often women are pregnant for a considerable part of their adult lives.

Pregnancy brings biological and behavioural changes that may make a woman more susceptible to getting HIV as well as making her more infectious, so increasing the risks of transmission.

To date limited prospective studies have found inconsistent results, showing both an increased risk and no elevated risk of acquiring HIV during pregnancy. However, evidence shows that women infected during their pregnancy have a high rate of HIV transmission to their infants.

The authors note one study which showed increased HIV shedding in genital secretions during pregnancy, suggesting increased infectiousness, yet no prospective study has looked specifically at pregnancy as a risk factor for female-to-male transmission.

The authors chose to look at the association between pregnancy and the risks of getting HIV as well as the risks of transmitting HIV from females-to-males in a secondary analysis of a prospective study of African HIV sero-discordant couples.

From November 2004 to April 2007 3408 HIV serodiscordant couples from Botswana, Kenya, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia were enrolled in the Partners in Prevention HSV-2/HIV transmission study, a randomised, placebo-controlled, clinical trial of aciclovir as herpes simplex virus-2 (HSV-2) suppressive therapy for the prevention of HIV transmission. Aciclovir did not decrease HIV transmission risk within the couples.

Of the 3321 couples in the analysis about a third (1085) included an HIV-infected male partner and the remaining two-thirds (2236) included an HIV-infected female partner.

Eligibility included being over 18 years of age, having three or more episodes of vaginal intercourse in the three months before screening and having the intention of remaining a couple.

HIV infected partners were positive for HSV-2, had CD4 cell counts over 250 cells/mm3 and were not taking antiretrovirals. HIV-infected women pregnant at the screening were excluded from the study. Women who became pregnant stopped the study medication until the end of pregnancy. Pregnant HIV-uninfected women were included as were those who became pregnant during follow-up.

HIV infected partners were seen monthly and HIV uninfected partners were seen every three months. Sexual behaviour data including condom use was recorded at each visit as was contraceptive use.

Comprehensive prevention services included individual and couple HIV risk reduction counselling, quarterly syndromic management of sexually transmitted infection treatment and free condoms.

The majority were married and living together. Median CD4 cell count was 461 cells/mm3. The couples were followed for up to 24 months; median time for HIV-negative and HIV-positive partners was 20.9 months (IQR: 15.6-24.1) and 19.9 months (IQR: 14.3-23.9), respectively.

Of the 61 HIV seroconversions among women close to 30% (17) happened during pregnancy. HIV incidence during pregnancy was 7.35 per 100 person years compared to 3.01 per 100 person years during non-pregnant periods,  (HR: 2.34, 95% CI: 1.33-4.09, p=0.003). Risk was high during both early and late pregnancy. However, in multivariate analysis after controlling for age, contraceptive use and unprotected sex, the effect of pregnancy on HIV risk was not statistically significant.

Of the 58 HIV transmissions to men, 12 (20.7%) happened during pregnancy. The incidence of female-to-male transmission was 3.46 per 100 person years during pregnancy compared to 1.58 per 100 person-years when the female partner was not pregnant. This was statistically significant  (HR  2.31, p=0.01) and remained significant after adjusting for confounding factors (HR.2.47, p=0.01).

The authors underscore the public health importance of these new findings showing pregnancy increases the risk of female-to-male transmission two-fold.  New strategies, they add, are needed “to strengthen family planning and maternal health services for women with and at risk for HIV in order to reduce unwanted pregnancies and avert HIV transmission to pregnant women and from pregnant women to their infants and partners.”

Strengths of the study include a large sample size and multinational cohort. The study also established a genetic viral linkage of transmitted HIV within partnerships so minimising the potential for misclassification of female-to-male transmission.

The authors note their findings can be generalised; all participants were co-infected with HSV-2 as are over 80% of all HIV infected adults in sub-Saharan Africa.

The authors conclude increased risk for HIV female-to-male transmission during pregnancy requires “further studies to understand the possible biologic mechanisms that may explain this finding.” They add: “Prenatal couples HIV counselling and testing, implementation of repeat HIV testing in pregnancy, and earlier initiation of combination ART should become part of routine antenatal care to protect mothers, infants and male partners from HIV.”

Source:1