Massive scale-up of HIV and AIDS treatment services with good clinical outcomes is feasible in primary care settings in sub-Saharan Africa. Most mortality occurs early, suggesting that earlier diagnosis and treatment may improve outcomes.
Objective
To estimate ART adherence rates during pregnancy and postpartum in high-, middle- and low-income countries.
Design
Systematic review and meta-analysis
Methods
MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCI Web of Science, NLM Gateway and Google scholar databases were searched. We included all studies reporting adherence rates as a primary or secondary outcome among HIV-infected pregnant women. Two independent reviewers extracted data on adherence and study characteristics. A random-effects model was used to pool adherence rates; sensitivity, heterogeneity, and publication bias were assessed.
Results
Of 72 eligible articles, 51studies involving 20,153 HIV-infected pregnant women were included. Most studies were from United States (n=14, 27%) followed by Kenya (n=6, 12%), South Africa (n=5, 10%), and Zambia (n=5, 10%). The threshold defining good adherence to ART varied across studies (>80%, >90%, >95%, 100%). A pooled analysis of all studies indicated a pooled estimate of 73.5% (95% confidence interval [CI] 69·3–77·5%, I2=97·7%) of pregnant women had adequate (>=80%) ART adherence. The pooled proportion of women with adequate adherence levels was higher during the antepartum (75·7%, 95% CI 71·5–79·7%) than during postpartum (53·0%, 95% 32.8% to 72·7%) (p=0·005). Selected reported barriers for non-adherence included physical, economic and emotional stresses, depression (especially post-delivery), alcohol or drug use, and ART dosing frequency or pill burden.
Conclusion
Our findings indicate that only 73·5% of pregnant women achieved optimal ART adherence. Reaching adequate ART adherence levels was a challenge in pregnancy, but especially during the postpartum period. Further research to investigate specific barriers and interventions to address them are urgently needed globally.
Y THE END OF 2006, AN ESTImated 2.3 million children worldwide were living with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). 1 Although most children acquire the virus through largely preventable mother-to-child transmission, roll-out of perinatal HIV prevention services has been sluggish worldwide. As a result, each day more than 1000 children become newly infected. 2 Without treatment, approximately half will die by their second birthday 3 ; however, lives can be extended and morbidity avoided with combination antiretroviral therapy (ART). In Zambia, recent progress has been made toward reducing new pediatric infections through aggressive scale-up of perinatal HIV prevention services. 4 Despite these efforts, 130 000 children are Author Affiliations are listed at the end of this article.
Background:
The provision of food supplementation to food insecure patients initiating antiretroviral therapy may improve adherence to medications.
Methods:
A home-based adherence support program at 8 government clinics assessed patients for food insecurity. 4 clinics provided food supplementation and 4 acted as controls. The analysis compared adherence (assessed by medication possession ratio [MPR]), CD4, and weight gain outcomes among food insecure patients enrolled at the food clinics to those of controls.
Results:
Between May 1, 2004 and March 31, 2005, 636 food insecure adults were enrolled. Food supplementation was associated with better adherence to therapy. 258 of 366 (70%) of patients in the food group achieved an MPR of 95% or greater versus 79 of 166 (48%) among controls (relative risk, RR=1.5; 95%CI:1.2-1.8). This finding was unchanged after adjustment for sex, age, baseline CD4 count, baseline WHO stage, and baseline hemoglobin. We did not observe a significant effect of food supplementation on weight gain or CD4 cell response.
Conclusions:
This analysis suggests that providing food to food insecure patients initiating ART is feasible and may improve adherence to medication. A large randomized study of the clinical benefits of food supplementation to ART patients is urgently needed to inform international policy.
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