Antiretroviral
therapy has had a significant effect on improving maternal health and
reducing
mortality, as well as preventing the transmission of HIV to infants. “As
maternal triple-drug use increases, it is critical to enhance
surveillance for
complications in pregnancy and [the] long-term outcomes in infants,”
stated
Lynne Mofenson in her overview and introduction to the session. She gave
the
example of a drug given to pregnant women in the 1950s,
diethylstibesterol
(DES), the effects of which were not recognised in the female offspring
for
decades, who were at increased risk for cervical as well as other
cancers.
The Antiretroviral
Pregnancy Register is an ongoing international registry started in 1989
to
collect reports from healthcare providers about adverse outcomes, such
as
birth defects or other abnormalities among infants born to women taking
antiretrovirals during pregnancy.
A total of 11,261
live births to women with HIV receiving antiretroviral drugs were reported
to the
Antiretroviral Pregnancy Register. Of infants exposed to antiretrovirals from
January 1989
to January 2010, the overall prevalence
was 2.7 defects per 100 births (95% CI:
2.4 to 3.0), Vani Vannappagari reported. Of the 4864 infants exposed during
the
first trimester, the prevalence rate was 2.8% (95% CI: 2.4 to 3.4). These
rates are
comparable both to the general population-based surveillance system, with
a rate
of 2.7%, (95%CI: 2.68 to 2.76) and the internal comparator of those exposed
during
the second and third trimesters
– 2.5% (95%CI: 2.2 to 3.0).
Understanding
of the association between exposure to antiretrovirals, pre-term
births and
low birth-weight (under 2500 grammes) is poorly understood. Some
evidence from
small cohorts has suggested the increased prevalence of pre-term birth
and low
birth weight is associated with exposure to protease inhibitors. Other
studies have
not reproduced this finding.
In a separate
analysis of the Antiretroviral Pregnancy Register, Karen Beckerman and
colleagues analysed 7334 of 10,022 reported births from January 1989 to
January
2009. The researchers compared the prevalence of pre-term births
at less
than 37 weeks into the pregnancy, at less than 32 weeks, birth weight
under
2500 grammes, and birth weight under 1500 grammes among infants exposed
to one
antiretroviral, two or more antiretrovirals (combination therapy) that
included
a protease inhibitor (PI), and combination therapy that did not include a
PI.
No
differences were reported in pre-term births and birth weight under 2500
grammes in those newborns exposed either to one drug or to
a
combination of antiretrovirals.
However, more
infants exposed to combination therapy that included a PI were born weighing less than 1500 grammes (17.4%) than those
exposed to combination
therapy without a PI (14%).
Pre-term
birth (under 37 weeks) was higher in those women on a PI-containing
regimen
than without, 14.1% compared to.11.8% (p 0.003). However, there was no
significant difference
in the proportion of pre-term births that occurred before 32 weeks of
gestation
according to the dose of drug the mother took.
The
prevalence of birth weight under 1500 grammes in those exposed to a
combination
that included a PI, while higher than in those exposed to a combination
without
a PI, was the same as those exposed to one antiretroviral and was
protective
against pre-term birth under 32 weeks (p 0.05).
Nonetheless,
the prevalence of birth weight under 1500 grammes was lower in all
combination
groups than in previously published reports of cohorts of HIV-exposed
newborns
with no antiretroviral exposure.
Very low
birth weights, Karen Beckman cautioned, are seen in very small numbers of
infants. For example, in their analysis of 10,000 live births, 188
babies
were born weighing less than 1500 grammes.
She added that
pre-term birth is better described as pre-term delivery syndrome.
“Multiple
causes are involved, including infectious and immunological ones,” she
noted,
adding, “We do not know how maternal disease stage and activity may
affect
pregnancy.”