1 / 67

Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission: The Role of Epidemiology in Health Care Policy

Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission: The Role of Epidemiology in Health Care Policy. Sindy M. Paul, M.D., M.P.H. March 7, 2005. Epidemiology of HIV Disease in New Jersey: 12/31/04. 5th in US Cumulative reported AIDS Cases Highest proportion of women (32%)

zocha
Download Presentation

Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission: The Role of Epidemiology in Health Care Policy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission: The Role of Epidemiology in Health Care Policy Sindy M. Paul, M.D., M.P.H. March 7, 2005

  2. Epidemiology of HIV Disease in New Jersey: 12/31/04 • 5th in US Cumulative reported AIDS Cases • Highest proportion of women (32%) • 3rd US Cumulative reported pediatric AIDS cases • 1,204/1,287 (94%) pediatric HIV/AIDS perinatal transmission

  3. Timing of Perinatal HIV Transmission • Cases documented intrauterine, intrapartum, and postpartum by breastfeeding* • In utero 25%–40% of cases • Intrapartum 60%–75% of cases • Addition risk (14-29%) with breastfeeding • Evidence suggests most transmission occurs during the intrapartum period * Fowler, MG, Ped. Clinics of N. America 2000.

  4. Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission • The Risk Of Transmission Can Be Reduced • Prenatal Care • Mandatory Counseling/Voluntary Testing • Know Serostatus As Early As Possible! • Antiretroviral Therapy & OB Procedures • PACTG 076: AZT Decreases Transmission From 25% to 8% • Recommend Against Breast Feeding

  5. Evaluation of Implementation • Access to Prenatal Care • Counseling and Testing: Provider & Patient • AZT and other Antiretroviral Agent Use • Impact on Transmission • Missed Opportunities • Potential Toxicities • Potential Adverse Outcomes

  6. Access to Prenatal Care 1993, 1995, 1996 • 25% of HIV Infected Pregnant Women Had No Known Prenatal Care • In 2000: 14% No Known Prenatal Care & 6% 1-2 Prenatal Visits • A Major Gap In Prevention Of Perinatal HIV Transmission In New Jersey • An Opportunity For Intervention

  7. Implementation Of Counseling And Testing Recommendations • 1995: NJ Law Mandatory Counseling, Voluntary Testing • Surveillance Data: 91% HIV Infected Pregnant Women Know Serostatus Prior to Delivery & 4% Tested at Delivery • Statewide Assessment Diffusion of Counseling And Testing OBGYN • Interview Study Of Pregnant Women

  8. Provider Survey: Results • 160/351 (51%) Completed Survey • 94% Offer HIV Testing • 90% Discuss Benefits of HIV Testing • 77% Counsel • 59% Offer All 3 Components

  9. Respondents More Likely To Offer Counseling • Fit Into Office Routine p<0.0001 • Better Medical Outcome p=0.0261 • Easy p=0.0016 • Confident in Counseling p<0.0001 • Patient Appreciation p=0.0001 • Standard of Care p=0.0002 • Actively Promoted p=0.0012 • Discuss with Colleague p=0.0171

  10. Conclusion • Doing Well, but Room for Improvement • Missed Opportunities • Improved Diffusion and Implementation of HIV Counseling and Testing among OBGN Could be Accomplished through Peer Education

  11. Interview Study: Pregnant Women • Convenience sample - 170 Pregnant Women • Objective: To Ascertain How Pregnant Women Perceive AZT as a Possible Option to Prevent Perinatal HIV Transmission by Examining Their Knowledge, Attitudes, Beliefs, and Intentions Surrounding AZT Use.

  12. Demographic Profile • African-American 53% • Hispanic/Latina 29% • Ages 18-34 84% • Unemployed 63%

  13. HIV Counseling and Testing History • 74% Reported Being Told About Benefits of HIV Testing • 90% Tested for HIV • 10% Not Tested Yet • 13/17 (76%) Intended to Be Tested • 4/17 (24%) Did Not Intend to Be Tested

  14. Intention to Use AZT • 57% Would Use AZT • 41% Unsure • 2% Would Not Take AZT

  15. Factors Associated With Intention To Use AZT • Positive Beliefs About AZT p<0.0001 • Recommended by Dr. or Nurse p=0.0023 • Access to AZT at Clinic or Dr. p=0.0076 • Enough Information p<0.0001 • Conspiracy Theories NOT ASSOCIATED

  16. Conclusion • Pregnant Women Are Willing to Consider AZT Use if They Are Given Adequate, Accurate Information.

  17. Implementation of PHS Recommendations in New Jersey • ART use: increased from 8.3% in 1993 to 84.2% known in 2003 • Decrease in perinatal transmission from 21% in 1993 to 3.0% in 2003 • Room for improvement recent studies show vertical transmission can be as low as 1-2% • What are the missed opportunities?

  18. New JerseyPediatric HIV/AIDS Cases & ExposuresBorn 1993-2004 By CategoryAs of December 31, 2004

  19. Missed Opportunities: Children Who Became Infected • 7 children infected 1999, 1 infected 2000 (preliminary data reports through 12/31/00) • 5 of the 8 (63%) no known or inadequate prenatal care • 7/8 (88%) HIV status unknown to the delivery team

  20. Missed Opportunities: Children Who Became Infected Continued • 1 of the 8 (13%) had prenatal care starting in 3rd trimester with antiretroviral agents in pregnancy, labor/delivery, and neonatal period and a vaginal delivery • Major gap: women presenting in labor with unknown HIV serostatus to the provider • Contributing factor: lack of or inadequate prenatal care

  21. Prevention of Perinatal HIV Transmission: ? Serostatus • Rapid Test for Unknown Serostatus • Short Course Therapy Options: - 1 dose NVP labor onset & 1 dose NVP for the newborn at age 48 hours - ZDV+3TC in labor &1 week ZDV+3TC for the newborn -Intrapartum ZDV+6 weeks ZDV newborn -2 dose NVP regimen + 6 weeks ZDV

  22. Hospital Survey:Management Labor Unknown Serostatus • Questionnaire telephone survey of 12 hospitals Essex, Hudson, Union counties • IRB approval • 12 licensed acute care general hospitals • 9/12 (75%) responded • 6/9 (67%) provide obstetrical care • 1/9 (10%) rapid test capability

  23. Hospital Survey: Management Labor Unknown Serostatus • 1/6 (17%) always offers CTS in labor • 2/6 (33%) almost always offer CTS in labor • 2/6 (33%) rarely or never offer CTS in labor • 0 policy for rapid test/short course therapy • 5/6 (83%) use standard EIA + Western Blot • 1/6 (17%) use HIV DNA PCR • Problem: obtaining results in 72 hrs to treat infant with ZDV

  24. Plan of Action: A Statewide Policy for Unknown Serostatus • Identify & involve providers & other stakeholders • Education • Development of a statewide policy for use by hospitals • Dissemination of information • Implementation of the policy • Evaluation

  25. Intent of the Standard of Care • Provide HIV counseling and voluntary rapid or expedited testing of mothers or newborns if unknown HIV status or mother reports HIV infection with no documentation on the medical record • Offer maternal &/or newborn ART if HIV +, mother reports being HIV +, or mother previously documented to be HIV +

  26. Intent of the Standard of Care • To decrease the risk of vertical transmission in every HIV exposed baby born in a New Jersey hospital to the best practice standards

  27. Standard of Care:Women in Labor with ? HIV Status • Provide counseling (pre- and posttest) • Voluntary rapid or expedited HIV test • If HIV positive provide preliminary lab results (CDC & ASTPHLD) • If HIV positive offer short course therapy • DO NOT DELAY RX pending confirmatory lab results • Refer mother & child for follow-up care

  28. Rapid Tests • SUDS • OraQuick • Reveal • Unigold • Multispot

  29. Rapid Tests: Oraquick • Fingerstick, purple top tube, or OMT specimen • FDA approved 11/02 CLIA waived 1/03 except OMT (FDA approved 3/04) • Not CLIA waived in NJ (lab regs) - Need a lab licensed by NJDHSS to perform diagnostic immunology (HIV testing) - Need to comply with CLIA ‘88 regs • ? Point of Service Testing

  30. Rapid Tests: Reveal • FDA approved 4/17/03 • Not CLIA waived • Moderate complexity test • Most be done in licensed lab • Batched - minimum 8 specimens/batch

  31. Rapid Tests: Unigold • FDA approved 12/03 • Whole blood, serum, plasma • CLIA waived • 10 minutes

  32. Multispot HIV1/HIV2 Test • FDA approved • Moderately complex • Not CLIA waived • Fresh or frozen plasma • 10 minutes

  33. How do other Rapid Tests Perform Compared to SUDS?

  34. Current Clinical Response to Rapid Testing Preliminary Positive Results • Occupational Exposure • Women in labor with unknown HV status • Why? Because tested person benefits - PEP reduces risk of occupational transmission - Short course therapy reduces risk of mother-to-child HIV transmission

  35. Clinical Trial Data Supporting Short Course Therapy • International studies show not as effective as PACTG 076 regimen (66% decrease) • Thailand Study Short Course AZT - Non-breastfeeding population - From 36 weeks through labor - Did not include infant prophylaxis - 50% decrease transmission (9.4% AZT vs 18.9% placebo)

  36. Clinical Trial Data Supporting Short Course Therapy - Petra • Petra Study (Uganda, S. Africa, Tan.) - Breastfeeding population - Oral AZT/3TC from 36 weeks and during labor& delivery - Oral AZT/3TC to woman and infant q 12 hours for 7 days postpartum - Reduced transmission by 38% (10% AZT/3TC vs. 17% placebo)

  37. Clinical Trial Data Short Course Therapy HIVNet 012 Uganda • Breastfeeding population • Intrapartum/postpartum/neonatal NVP vs. short course neonatal AZT • 200 mg po NVP at labor onset; 2mg po NVP to infant within 3 days • 600 mg AZT labor onset; 300 mg AZT q 3 hr in labor; 4mg/kg AZT infant bid 7 d - Transmission rate 12% NVP vs. 21% AZT

  38. Goals of Treatment of HIV Infected Pregnant Women • Treatment of mother’s HIV disease • Reducing the risk of vertical HIV transmission • Health of the mother and the child

  39. CDC: What if a Woman Presents in Labor with Unknown Status? • Counseling • Opt out option possible (check state regs) • CDC Mother-Infant Rapid Intervention at Delivery (MIRIAD) counseling feasible in labor • Template developed based on NJ • Counselors should be trained

  40. CDC Recommendations for Women in Labor with ? HIV • Rapid testing • POCT shorter turn around time • Short course therapy • Referral for care and treatment

  41. CDC: Eligibility for Counseling & Offering Rapid Testing in Labor • Undocumented HIV status • Addition re-screen continued risk • Approach similar to syphilis retesting in 3rd trimester and at delivery for high risk • H/O STD, sex for $ or drugs, multiple sex partners during pregnancy, illicit drug use, HIV + or high risk partner, signs and symptoms of seroconversion

  42. Concerns with Counseling Women in Labor • How to present HIV counseling and offer testing during labor? • Development of model counseling session - Review of Lit & Discussion with CDC • Meetings teaching & non-teaching hospital staff • Focus group postpartum women • Statewide TOT with MCH consortia

  43. Counseling During Labor • Not a great time, but possible! • Policy and procedure in place with a counseling “script” • Materials for patient education/informed consent • Culturally and linguistically appropriate • Done for other OB procedures i.e. C-section

  44. C3 Confidentiality Comfort Consent R3 Reasons toTest Results Rx to decrease risk Formula for HIV Counseling and Testing in Labor: C3R3

  45. Confidentiality • Who is in the room with the patient? • How can you assure confidentiality during - History taking - Giving test results - Giving medication for treatment • Be creative - counseling part of admission process, visitors get coffee, in bathroom

  46. Comfort • What is her level of discomfort/anxiety? • How is her pain being managed? • Tell the woman she should signal you when a contraction is happening, so you can pause until it is over. • Important to show empathy:body language &/or touch. • Pause to verify understanding.

  47. How Much Information is “Informed” Consent? • HIV is the virus that causes AIDS • A woman can be at risk and not know it • Effective intervention can prevent transmission to the baby and improve mother’s health • Testing recommended all pregnant women • Women who decline testing won’t be denied care

  48. Reasons for HIV Testing During Labor • HIV the virus that causes AIDS is spread by unprotected sexual intercourse • Therefore, all pregnant women may be at risk for HIV infection • Pregnant woman has a 1 in 4 chance of passing HIV to baby if she is not treated • ART in labor/delivery & neonatal period: 1 in 10 babies will get infected

  49. Giving the Results: Preliminary Positive Results • May be infected with HIV • Confirm with a 2nd test (no test =perfect) • May be best to start ART for you & baby • Wait for confirmatory results before breastfeeding (Can start only if neg.) • If confirmatory test neg. stop medication • If confirmatory test + cont. meds, referral for care, follow-up testing baby

  50. Giving the Results: Preliminary Negative Results • Not infected with HIV • Emphasize risk reduction plan to prevent transmission • Referral for intensive counseling if high risk • Note: a negative rapid test is negative and does not need confirmation that it is negative

More Related