Abstract
IntroductionHigh maternal HIV incidence contributes substantially to mother‐to‐child HIV transmission (MTCT) in some settings. Since 2006, HIV retesting during the third trimester and breastfeeding has been recommended by the World Health Organization in higher prevalence (≥5%) settings to reduce MTCT. However, many countries lack clarity on when and how often to retest pregnant and postpartum women to optimize resources and service delivery. We reviewed and characterized national guidelines on maternal retesting based on timing and frequency.MethodsWe identified 52 countries to represent variations in HIV prevalence, geography, and MTCT priority and searched available national MTCT, HIV testing and HIV treatment policies published between 2007 and 2017 for recommendations on retesting during pregnancy, labour/delivery and postpartum. Recommended retesting frequency and timing was extracted. Country HIV prevalence was classified as: very low (<1%), low (1% to 5%), intermediate (>5 to <15%) and high (≥15%). Women with unknown HIV status at delivery/postpartum were included in retesting guidelines.Results and discussionOverall, policies from 49 countries were identified; 51% from 2015 or later and most (n = 25) were from Africa. Four countries were high HIV prevalence, seven intermediate, sixteen low and twenty‐two very low. Most (n = 31) had guidance on universal voluntary opt‐out HIV testing at the first antenatal care (ANC) visit. Beyond the first ANC visit, the majority (78%, n = 38) had guidance on retesting; 22 recommended retesting all women with unknown/negative status, five only if unknown HIV status, three in pregnancy based on risk and eight combining these approaches. Retesting was universally recommended during pregnancy, labour/delivery, and postpartum for all high prevalence settings and four of seven intermediate prevalence settings. Five UNAIDS priority countries for EMTCT with low/very low HIV prevalence, but high/intermediate MTCT, had no guidance on retesting.ConclusionsRetesting guidelines for pregnant and postpartum women were ubiquitous in high prevalence countries and defined in some intermediate prevalence countries, but absent in some low HIV prevalence countries with high MTCT. Countries may require additional guidance on how to optimize maternal HIV testing and whether to prioritize retesting efforts or discontinue universal retesting based on HIV incidence. Research is needed to assess country‐level guideline implementation and impact.
Highlights
High maternal HIV incidence contributes substantially to mother-to-child HIV transmission (MTCT) in some settings
Countries with maternal HIV retesting guidelines were classified based on their approach to retesting as: (1) universal if testing recommendations apply to all pregnant and/or postpartum women; (2) targeted if testing recommendations apply to pregnant and/or postpartum women based on individual- or population-level risk factors; (3) only if unknown if testing recommendations are only for pregnant/ postpartum women without documented HIV test results from earlier antenatal care (ANC) visits; (4) combination if more than one approach was recommended during pregnancy and postpartum
(including two countries who confirmed the absence of maternal retesting guidelines) and included in the review
Summary
Maternal HIV testing and treatment is the cornerstone of prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) programmes, and has helped to prevent over two million paediatric HIV infections since 2000 [1]. High (>3 per 100 person-years) maternal HIV incidence (during both pregnancy and breastfeeding) contributes substantially to mother-to-child HIV transmission (MTCT) in sub-Saharan Africa [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12], accounting for nearly half of all paediatric HIV infections in some high prevalence settings [13,14]. While efforts towards EMTCT encompass both high and low prevalence settings, timely identification and treatment of HIV-infected pregnant women are critical components of all successful programmes. Retesting during pregnancy/postpartum has been shown to be an effective strategy to detect incident maternal infections [3,4,9], resulting in low MTCT transmission rates in one study conducted in Kenya [3]. We compared retesting strategies by geographic region, national HIV prevalence and MTCT rates
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