HIV and Hepatitis.com Coverage of the
14th Annual Conference on Retroviruses
and Opportunistic Infections (14th CROI)

February 25 - 28, 2007, Los Angeles, CA
Short-course Antiretroviral Therapy to Prevent Mother-to-child HIV Transmission May Compromise Women's Treatment

By Liz Highleyman

Widespread use of prophylactic antiretroviral therapy has dramatically lowered the risk of mother-to-child transmission of HIV. In developed countries, pregnant women with HIV are typically advised to receive combination HAART, but in resource-limited settings, a short course of AZT (Retrovir), with or without 3TC (Epivir), or a single dose of nevirapine (Viramune) are often used during delivery.

In a late-breaker presentation at the 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, held last month in Los Angeles, researchers reported that short-course antiretroviral therapy may compromise mothers' response when they later begin combination therapy to treat their own disease.

The investigators studied 247 HIV-positive mothers in Côte d'Ivoire, Africa, who started regimens containing AZT or d4T (Zerit) plus 3TC plus either nevirapine or efavirenz (Sustiva). Of these women, 86 had received short-course AZT/3TC plus single-dose nevirapine during a previous pregnancy, 52 had received short-course AZT plus single-dose nevirapine, 5 had received short-course AZT/3TC without nevirapine, 2 had received single-dose nevirapine alone, and 109 were unexposed to any prior antiretroviral therapy. The women started HAART a median of 19 months after exposure to prophylactic therapy to prevent mother-to-child transmission.

Results

None of the 115 women who underwent genotypic resistance testing had AZT-resistance mutations.

15.0% of the 73 tested 3TC-exposed women had 3TC-resistance mutations.

38.1% of women exposed to short-course AZT plus single-dose nevirapine developed nevirapine-resistance mutations, as did 4.1% of those exposed to AZT/3TC plus single-dose nevirapine.

19.2% of women experienced virological failure after starting HAART.

In a multivariate analysis, factors associated with virological failure were:

- poor self-reported adherence;
- post-partum 3TC-resistance mutations ;
- baseline CD4 cell count less than 200 cells/mm3.

Half of the women with 3TC-resistance mutations experienced virological failure.

Women exposed to 3TC who did not develop resistance mutations were not at significantly increased risk of virological failure.

Exposure to single-dose nevirapine was not associated with a significantly increased risk of virological failure.

27.8% of nevirapine-exposed women with nevirapine-resistance mutations experienced virological failure, compared 18.6% of women without resistance mutations.


Conclusion

The researchers concluded that short course AZT with or without 3TC and single-dose nevirapine "may induce viral resistance to nevirapine or 3TC that can impair the subsequent women's response to HAART, an adverse phenomenon to be taken into account in [prevention of mother-to-child transmission] guidelines."

Unlike the current study, several past studies have shown that single-dose nevirapine can lead to resistance mutations that compromise treatment for the mother, although HIV typically reverts to wild-type (fully drug susceptible) after 6 months.

As reported in the March 15, 2007 Journal of Infectious Diseases, a group of researchers developed a stochastic simulation model to predict survival and mortality associated with use of single-dose nevirapine in sub-Saharan Africa. The model predicted that if all women exposed to single-dose nevirapine during pregnancy later started HAART, mortality attributable to single-dose nevirapine would be 1.1% at 5 years and 3.5% at 10 years after exposure.

The researchers wrote that their model "provides strong arguments that single-dose nevirapine for [prevention of mother-to-child transmission] should not be delayed because of fear of compromising the survival of women after [prevention of mother-to-child transmission] therapy."
Nevertheless, the Côte D'Ivoire results suggest that wherever possible, HIV positive women should receive triple antiretroviral therapy during pregnancy, as recommended by the World Health Organization.

03/13/07

References

P Coffie, D Ekouevi, M L Chaix, and others. Short-course zidovudine and lamivudine or single-dose nevirapine-containing PMTCT compromises 12-month response to HAART in African women, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire (2003-2006). 14th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections. Los Angeles, February 25-28, 2007. Abstract 93LB (oral).

D Westreich, J Eron, F Behets, and others. Survival in women exposed to single-dose nevirapine for prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV: a stochastic model. Journal of Infectious Diseases 195(6): 837-846. March 15, 2007.











































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