Abstract

IntroductionDespite notable progress towards PMTCT, only 50% of HIV‐exposed infants in sub‐Saharan Africa were tested within the first 2 months of life and only 30% of HIV‐infected infants are on antiretroviral treatment. This study assessed HIV prevalence in infants and children receiving care at various service entry points in primary healthcare facilities in Uganda.MethodsA total of 3600 infants up to 24 months of age were systematically enrolled and tested at four regional hospitals across Uganda. Six hundred infants were included and tested from six facility entry points: PMTCT, immunization, inpatient, nutrition, outpatient and community outreach services.FindingsThe traditional EID entry point, PMTCT, had a prevalence of 3.8%, representing 19.6% of the total HIV‐positive infants identified in the study. Fifty percent of the 117 identified HIV‐positive infants were found in the nutrition wards, which had a prevalence of 9.8% (p < 0.001 compared to PMTCT). Inpatient wards had a prevalence of 3.5% and yielded 17.9% of the HIV‐positive infants identified. Infants tested at immunization wards and through outreach services identified 0.8% and 1.7% of the HIV‐positive infants respectively, and had a prevalence of less than 0.3%.ConclusionsExpanding routine early infant diagnosis screening beyond the traditional PMTCT setting to nutrition and inpatient entry points will increase the identification of HIV‐infected infants. Careful reflection for appropriate testing strategies, such as maternal re‐testing to identify new HIV infections and HIV‐exposed infants in need of follow‐up testing and care, at immunization and outreach services should be considered given the expectedly low prevalence rates. These findings may help HIV care programmes significantly expand testing to improve access to early infant diagnosis and paediatric treatment.

Highlights

  • Despite notable progress towards prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT), only 50% of HIV-exposed infants in sub-Saharan Africa were tested within the first 2 months of life and only 30% of HIV-infected infants are on antiretroviral treatment

  • Infants were recruited from six entry points at each healthcare facility: Immunization (Expanded Programme on Immunization)/well-child clinic, paediatric outpatient, paediatric inpatient, nutrition, outreach and PMTCT, which is the traditional setting for early infant diagnosis (EID) testing

  • Fifty percent of the 117 HIV-positive infants identified in this study were found at the nutrition entry point, which had a prevalence of 9.8% (p < 0.001, compared to PMTCT)

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Summary

Introduction

Despite notable progress towards PMTCT, only 50% of HIV-exposed infants in sub-Saharan Africa were tested within the first 2 months of life and only 30% of HIV-infected infants are on antiretroviral treatment. Careful reflection for appropriate testing strategies, such as maternal re-testing to identify new HIV infections and HIV-exposed infants in need of follow-up testing and care, at immunization and outreach services should be considered given the expectedly low prevalence rates These findings may help HIV care programmes significantly expand testing to improve access to early infant diagnosis and paediatric treatment. The increase in ART coverage amongst children over the same time period, from 10% in 2009 to 35% in 2015, was significantly lower and overall ART coverage among infants is less than 50% of maternal coverage This is largely because HIV-exposed infants either do not receive a timely, actionable result or are not tested at all. Improvements in EID coverage have been minimal in recent years and some countries have reported testing plateaus or declines [1]

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