Background: We examined antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation and retention by sex and pregnancy status in rural Nigeria.
Methods:We studied HIV-infected ART-naïve patients aged ≥15 years entering care from June 2009 to September 2013. We calculated the probability of early ART initiation and cumulative incidence of loss to follow-up (LTFU) during the first year of ART, and examined the association between LTFU and sex/pregnancy using Cox regression.
Results:The cohort included 3813 ART-naïve HIV-infected adults (2594 women [68.0%], 273 [11.8%] of them pregnant). The proportion of pregnant clients initiating ART within 90 days of enrollment (78.0%, 213/273) was higher than among non-pregnant women (54.3%,1261/2321) or men (53.0%, 650/1219), both p<0.001. Pregnant women initiated ART sooner than non-pregnant women and men (median [IQR] days from enrollment to ART initiation for pregnant women=7 days [0-21] vs 14 days for non-pregnant women and 14 days for men; p<0.001). Cumulative incidence of LTFU during the first year post-ART initiation was high and did not differ by sex and pregnancy status. Persons who were unemployed, bedridden, had higher CD4+ counts, and/or in earlier WHO clinical stages were more likely to be LTFU.Conclusions: Pregnant women with HIV in rural Nigeria were more likely to initiate ART but were no more likely to be retained in care. Our findings underscore the importance of effective retention strategies across all patient groups, regardless of sex and pregnancy status.Keywords: Antiretroviral therapy, HIV/AIDS, Loss to follow-up, Nigeria, Retention in care
IntroductionThe inclusion of gender-related analysis in medical research is essential to understanding the role of sex and pregnancy on disease outcomes, including differential uptake of health services.1-3 Sex-related differences in antiretroviral pharmacokinetics, treatment initiation and adherence, and susceptibility to adverse events are well documented. 4,5 However, there is considerable variation in the consistency of findings regarding sex differences in initiation of ART. Whereas some studies suggest that men may be more likely to initiate ART than women 6-8 or vice versa, 9 others do not show any differences. [10][11][12] In addition, recent studies from sub-Saharan Africa, [13][14][15] including Nigeria,16 suggest that male sex may be an important predictor of mortality in HIV-infected adults, partly because men enter ART programs with more advanced disease and lower CD4+ cell counts. 13,[17][18][19][20][21][22][23] Now that WHO advocates for the Option B+ strategy (placing HIV-infected pregnant women on lifelong ART) for programmatic and operational reasons (particularly in settings with generalized epidemics), and the African programs supported by the U.S. President's Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) are advocating Option B+ when national Ministries of Health adopt it, outcomes research from sub-Saharan Africa must consider sex and pregnancy-based differences. The objective of this study was to examine whether sex and ...