United States (US) Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a public health advisory recommending against initiating nevirapine (NVP) in HIV-infected women (including pregnant women) with CD4 counts >250 cells/µl. 1 The NVP package insert was revised accordingly to warn about risks, with further revision in November 2011 to comply with FDA recommendations on product labelling safety.
2The initial warning followed a meta-analysis of hepatotoxicity in over 600 women, stratified by CD4 count (risk ratio 9.8 with a CD4 count ≥250 cells/µl).3 However, results from several subsequent studies with larger datasets demonstrated no association between CD4 count and NVP toxicity. [4][5][6] Current World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines recommend NVP as part of first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) for pregnant women with CD4 ≤350 cells/µl, 7 based on their own analysis of 836 pregnant women, which showed no increased hepatotoxicity risk at CD4 ≥250 cells/µl (relative risk 1.04; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.22 -4.93). 9 In contrast, the 2011 perinatal guidelines from the US Department of Health and Human Services recommend a protease inhibitor as part of the ART regimen for pregnant women with a CD4 count ≥250 cells/µl, while cautioning against starting NVP above this count. 10 The British HIV Association 2012 draft guidelines recommend either efavirenz (EFV) or NVP (with a CD4 count <250 cells/µl) or a boosted protease inhibitor as the third drug for pregnant women requiring ART for their own health. 11 The recommendation of EFV is a departure from previous guidelines discouraging its use in pregnancy. Furthermore, women who conceived on EFV-based ART need not switch to another drug in the first trimester, following analysis of recent data showing no increased risk of birth defects after first-trimester EFV exposure.
11Reports of NVP-related maternal deaths have surfaced in South Africa, generating renewed concerns about the drug's safety, notably among ART-naive pregnant women. The Eastern Cape Province recently amended its PMTCT guidelines following an analysis of 45 HIV-related maternal deaths, 6 due to liver failure and StevensJohnson Syndrome (SJS). The use of NVP in pregnancy since then has been limited to a single dose at delivery (M Shweni, personal communication).To address the uncertainty about the safety of initiating NVPbased ART in pregnancy, we aimed to determine whether ART-naive pregnant women initiating NVP at higher CD4 counts experience greater toxicity.
MethodsThe Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and MetaAnalyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed.12 All studies except case reports were evaluated for inclusion without consideration of their results. ART-naive pregnant women initiating NVP-based ART during the index pregnancy for maternal health or infant prophylaxis were included. For studies that included both ART-naive and -experienced pregnant women, only the data of ART-naive participants were extracted. ART-experienced pregnant women were excluded, including those naive to N...