Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women: A Priority Population for HIV Viral Load Monitoring (Myer, 2017)
Myer, Landon, Shaffiq Essajee, Laura N. Broyles et al., “Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women: A Priority Population for HIV Viral Load Monitoring,” PLOS Medicine 14, no.8 (August 2017), doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1002375
URL: journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1002375
Abstract
With more than 18 million HIV-infected individuals having initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) by the end of 2016, ensuring effective HIV care and treatment services is a global public health priority. Viral load (VL) quantification provides a direct measure of the effectiveness of ART, with a consistently elevated VL suggesting poor adherence or treatment failure and the need for intervention. In turn, HIV VL monitoring is now recognised as a key component of ART services in LMICs in World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines, with an emphasis on scaling up access to VL testing for ART programmes.
Pregnant and postpartum women are an important population within ART programmes. In many countries, the majority of identified HIV-infected adults are women, and many women of reproductive age are diagnosed with HIV infection during pregnancy through prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) services in antenatal care (ANC). With universal eligibility for ART for all HIV-infected pregnant and postpartum women (based on the WHO’s 2013 ‘Option B+’ policy), many women of reproductive age initiating ART do so during pregnancy. PMTCT services extend through early infant diagnosis around 6–10 weeks postpartum until the cessation of breastfeeding and documentation of the infant’s final HIV testing status, which may extend well beyond 1 year postpartum based on the recently updated infant feeding recommendations. With ongoing risk of HIV transmission throughout breastfeeding, maintaining ART adherence and viral suppression is especially crucial during this period.
Although the importance of routine VL monitoring for HIV-infected individuals on ART is widely recognised, there has been minimal attention to VL monitoring in pregnancy and the postpartum period. Here we discuss key considerations for VL monitoring in pregnant and breastfeeding women in the context of expanding access to VL monitoring.
Myer et al. (2017) argue for the importance of measuring the amount of HIV genetic material in a blood sample—viral load (VL) monitoring—during pregnancy and breastfeeding as a more effective means of prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV/AIDS. This is a shift from focus on adherence to an ART scheme, toward viral suppression, as a better way to improve maternal, child, and family health.