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    Curr Opin HIV AIDS. 2008 Mar;3(2):161-5.

    Prophylactic antiretroviral regimens for prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV in resource-limited settings.

    Source

    INSERM 593, Institute for Public Health, Epidemiology and Development (ISPED), Victor Segalen University, Bordeaux, France.

    Abstract

    PURPOSE OF REVIEW:

    With the large international mobilization against HIV/AIDS, more HIV-infected people in resource-limited settings have access to antiretroviral therapy, including pregnant women. The relevance of simplified prophylactic antiretroviral regimens for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV may become questionable due to their lower efficacy and their higher risk of inducing viral resistance than fully suppressive antiretroviral therapy.

    RECENT FINDINGS:

    Field implementation of current recommendations, impact of prophylactic regimens on subsequent antiretroviral therapy response and possible new indications of antiretroviral therapy in pregnant women will be reviewed in this paper.

    SUMMARY:

    Prophylactic antiretroviral prevention of mother-to-child transmission regimens reached only 10% of the HIV-infected pregnant women in 2006, who were usually offered single-dose nevirapine only. The operational links between antenatal care and antiretroviral therapy programmes can now be documented and demonstrate good results in terms of safety and efficacy. The negative impact of single-dose nevirapine exposure on subsequent first-line antiretroviral therapy appears worse for mothers with advanced HIV disease at the time of delivery and short interval before antiretroviral therapy initiation. Strengthening the links between antenatal care and antiretroviral therapy programmes is critical for antiretroviral therapy-eligible HIV-infected pregnant women in terms of prevention of mother-to-child transmission and subsequent antiretroviral therapy response. The breastfeeding period could be a new indication for antiretroviral therapy in this population.

    PMID:
    19372960
    [PubMed - in process]
    PMCID:
    PMC2683174
    Free PMC Article

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