1 research outputs found
Impact of maternal ART on mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HIV at six weeks postpartum in Rwanda
BACKGROUND: In 2010, Rwanda adopted ART for prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV from pregnant
women living with HIV during pregnancy and breasfeeding period. This study examines rates of mother-to-childtransmission
of HIV at 6–10 weeks postpartum and risk factors for mother-to-child transmission of HIV (MTCT)
among HIV infected women on ART during pregnancy and breastfeeding.
METHODS: A cross-sectional survey study was conducted between July 2011–June 2012 among HIV-exposed infants
aged 6–10 weeks and their mothers/caregivers. Stratified multi-stage, probability proportional to size and systematic
sampling to select a national representative sample of clients. Consenting mothers/caregivers were interviewed on
demographic and program interventions. Dry blood spots from HIV-exposed infants were collected for HIV testing
using DNA PCR technique. Results are weighted for sample realization. Univariable analysis of socio-demographic
and programmatic determinants of early mother-to-child transmission of HIV was conducted. Variables were
retained for final multivariable models if they were either at least of marginal significance (p-value < 0.10) or played
a confounding role (the variable had a noticeable impact > 10% change on the effect estimate).
RESULTS: The study sample was 1639 infants with HIV test results. Twenty-six infants were diagnosed HIV-positive
translating to a weighted MTCT estimate of 1.58% (95% CI 1.05–2.37%). Coverage of most elimination of MTCT
(EMTCT) program interventions, was above 80, and 90.4% of mother-infant pairs received antiretroviral treatment or
prophylaxis. Maternal ART and infant antiretroviral prophylaxis (OR 0.01; 95%CI 0.001–0.17) and maternal age older
than 25 years were significantly protective (OR 0.33; 95%CI 0.14–0.78). No disclosure of HIV status, not testing for
syphilis during pregnancy and preterm birth were significant risk factors for MTCT. Factors suggesting higher sociodemographic
status (flush toilet, mother self-employed) were borderline risk factors for MTCT.
CONCLUSION: ART for all women during pregnancy and breastfeeding was associated with the estimated low MTCT
rate of 1.58%. Mothers who did not receive a full package of anti-retroviral therapy according to the Rwanda EMTCT
protocol, and young and single mothers were at higher risk of MTCT and should be targeted for support in
preventing HIV infection