Antiretroviral 
              Therapy for Mother or Infant Reduces HIV Transmission during Breast-feeding
              
              
                
                 
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                        | SUMMARY: 
                          Treating HIV positive 
                          mothers with a combination 
                          antiretroviral regimen or giving infants nevirapine 
                          for 28 days after birth both reduced the risk of mother-to-child 
                          HIV transmission during breast-feeding, according to 
                          findings from the BAN Study reported in the June 
                          17, 2010 New England Journal of Medicine. 
                          But the Mma Bana Study, described in the same issue, 
                          found that women with HIV should start antiretroviral 
                          therapy (ART) during pregnancy to have the greatest 
                          effect in reducing transmission risk. |  |  |  | 
                 
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              By 
                Liz Highleyman
                
                 In 
                high-income countries, HIV positive pregnant women are advised 
                to use a complete ART regimen regardless of CD4 cell count and 
                to not breast-feed their infants. In resource-limited countries, 
                pregnant women with higher CD4 cell counts still often receive 
                the ACTG 076 regimen of zidovudine 
                (AZT; Retrovir) during pregnancy and labor, and for the infant 
                for 6 months after birth. A single dose of nevirapine 
                (Viramune) may also be used, though this can promote drug 
                resistance in the mother.
In 
                high-income countries, HIV positive pregnant women are advised 
                to use a complete ART regimen regardless of CD4 cell count and 
                to not breast-feed their infants. In resource-limited countries, 
                pregnant women with higher CD4 cell counts still often receive 
                the ACTG 076 regimen of zidovudine 
                (AZT; Retrovir) during pregnancy and labor, and for the infant 
                for 6 months after birth. A single dose of nevirapine 
                (Viramune) may also be used, though this can promote drug 
                resistance in the mother. 
                
                Due to competing risks related to unclean water and inadequate 
                nutrition, the World Health Organization recommends that HIV positive 
                mothers should breast-feed exclusively for 6 months if replacement 
                feeding is not "acceptable, feasible, affordable, sustainable, 
                and safe." But the rate of HIV transmission during breast-feeding 
                reaches about 9% after 18 months.
                
                Charles Chasela and fellow investigators with the BAN Study Group 
                evaluated whether antiretroviral treatment during breast-feeding 
                -- either for the mother or for the baby -- can help reduce the 
                likelihood of mother-to-child HIV transmission.
              The 
                analysis included 2369 HIV positive mothers in Malawi with a CD4 
                count of at least 250 cells/mm3. Women with anemia or pre-existing 
                liver impairment, and those who had previously used antiretroviral 
                drugs during pregnancy, were excluded. All women received oral 
                single-dose nevirapine during labor followed by zidovudine/lamivudine 
                (Combivir) for both mothers from the onset or labor and babies 
                from birth, continuing for 7 days. 
              Mother-infant 
                pairs were randomly allocated into 3 groups after the first week. 
                In the first group, mothers were treated for 28 weeks with zidovudine/lamivudine 
                plus nevirapine, which was replaced with nelfinavir 
                (Viracept) and then lopinavir/ritonavir 
                (Kaletra) for women recruited later (after studies showed 
                nevirapine could cause hypersensitivity reactions in women with 
                CD4 counts > 250 cells/mm3); infants received no therapy. 
              In 
                the second group, infants were treated with nevirapine monotherapy 
                for 28 weeks (increasing from 10 mg daily for the first 2 weeks 
                to 30 mg daily starting at week 19); mothers received no treatment. 
                In the control group, neither mothers nor infants received antiretroviral 
                drugs during breast-feeding but received nutritional supplements 
                (enrollment in this arm was halted early).
                
                Mothers were counseled to breast-feed exclusively for 6 months, 
                then wean the baby rapidly between 24 and 28 weeks, since studies 
                have shown that mixed feeding of breast milk and alternative foods 
                increases HIV transmission risk.
                
                The primary outcome was the number of infants who became infected 
                with HIV after 2 months of age, indicating that transmission occurred 
                during breast-feeding rather than during gestation or delivery.
                
                Results  
                
              
                 
                  |  | Overall, 
                    5.0% of infants were found to be HIV infected at 2 weeks. | 
                 
                  |  | Between 
                    2 and 28 weeks, the risk of infection was higher in the control 
                    group (5.7%) than in either the maternal treatment group (2.9%; 
                    P = 0.009) or the infant treatment group (1.7%; P < 0.001). | 
                 
                  |  | In 
                    an analysis that included all randomized infants regardless 
                    of infection status at 2 weeks, the risk of HIV infection 
                    at 28 weeks was 10.9%, 8.2%, and 6.0%, respectively. | 
                 
                  |  | Similarly, 
                    the combined risk of infant HIV infection or death between 
                    2 and 28 weeks was higher in the control group (7.0%) than 
                    in the maternal treatment group (4.1%; P = 0.02) or the infant 
                    treatment group (2.6%; P < 0.001). | 
                 
                  |  | Among 
                    all infants regardless of HIV status at 2 weeks, the risk 
                    of infection or death was 12.3%, 9.6%, and 7.1%, respectively. | 
                 
                  |  | Mothers 
                    receiving combination therapy during breast-feeding were more 
                    likely to develop neutropenia (6.2%) than women in the infant 
                    treatment group (2.6%) or the control group (2.3%). | 
                 
                  |  | 1.9% 
                    of infants treated with nevirapine for 28 weeks developed 
                    hypersensitivity reactions. | 
              
               
                Based on these findings, the investigators concluded, "The 
                use of either a maternal antiretroviral regimen or infant nevirapine 
                for 28 weeks was effective in reducing HIV-1 transmission during 
                breast-feeding."
              "The 
                protective efficacy against HIV-1 transmission from 2 to 28 weeks 
                was 74% for infant nevirapine and 53% for the maternal antiretroviral 
                regimen," they elaborated in their discussion. "Infants 
                also had significantly increased HIV-1-negative survival with 
                both interventions, with a trend toward increased benefit when 
                the drug regimen was administered directly to the infant."
                
                "Health care providers and mothers can ultimately choose 
                the option that best suits their cultural, economic, and individual 
                needs, since there is now evidence for 2 effective options to 
                prevent the transmission of HIV-1 to infants from their mothers 
                during breast-feeding in resource-limited countries," they 
                added.
              Another 
                study reported in the same issue also demonstrated the benefits 
                of treating mothers during breast-feeding, though here treatment 
                was started during pregnancy and did not include an extended infant 
                treatment arm. 
                
                The Mma Bana study included 560 HIV positive pregnant women in 
                Botswana who had a CD4 cell count above 200 cells/mm3. Starting 
                at 26 to 34 weeks of pregnancy and continuing through infant weaning 
                at 6 months, they were randomly assigned to receive either zidovudine/lamivudine/abacavir 
                (Trizivir combination pill) or else lopinavir/ritonavir plus 
                zidovudine/lamivudine; in addition, 170 women with a CD4 cell 
                count < 200 cells/mm3 started zidovudine/lamivudine plus nevirapine. 
                All infants received single-dose nevirapine after delivery and 
                zidovudine for 4 weeks.
                
                More than 95% of women in all study arms achieved undetectable 
                viral load. The overall rate of mother-to-child HIV transmission 
                was very low at 1.1% -- in fact, it was among the lowest ever 
                seen in randomized studies of ART during pregnancy and breast-feeding 
                in resource-limited settings -- and did not differ significantly 
                between the Trizivir (2.1%) and lopinavir/ritonavir (0.4%) arms. 
                While 6 transmissions occurred during pregnancy, 2 cases occurred 
                during breast-feeding in the Trizivir arm.
                
                In an accompanying editorial, Lynne Mofenson from the Pediatric, 
                Adolescent and Maternal AIDS Branch of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver 
                National Institute of Child Health and Human Development summarized 
                the clinical implications of the 2 studies.
              "To 
                maximally reduce transmission, antiretroviral regimens must start 
                during pregnancy," she wrote. "In the BAN study, which 
                did not include an antepartum regimen, in utero transmission was 
                5.0% as compared with 0.9% in the Mma Bana Study."
              "In 
                the BAN control group, the risk of postnatal infection was highest 
                between 2 and 12 weeks of age," she continued. "During 
                this early high-risk period, the infant regimen reduced postnatal 
                transmission by 86.1% (from 3.6% in the control group to 0.5%), 
                while the maternal regimen reduced transmission by 52.8% (from 
                3.6% in the control group to 1.7%)...This early difference in 
                efficacy probably reflected the time required for the triple-drug 
                regimen to suppress the maternal viral load. Therefore, in women 
                presenting late or during labor, the use of nevirapine in infants 
                may be particularly critical to prevent early postnatal infection." 
                
              University 
                of North Carolina Project, Lilongwe, Malawi; University of North 
                Carolina, Chapel Hill, CD; Principia, Chapel Hill, NC; Centers 
                for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
              6/18/10
              Reference
              CS 
                Chasela, MG Hudgens, DJ Jamieson, and others (BAN Study Group).
                Maternal or Infant Antiretroviral Drugs to Reduce HIV-1 Transmission. 
                New England Journal of Medicine 362(24): 2271-2281 (Abstract). 
                June 17, 2010.
              RL 
                Shapiro, MD Hughes, A Ogwu, and others. Antiretroviral Regimens 
                in Pregnancy and Breast-Feeding in Botswana. New England Journal 
                of Medicine 362(24): 2282-2294 (Abstract). 
                June 17, 2010.
              LM 
                Mofenson. Protecting the Next Generation -- Eliminating Perinatal 
                HIV-1 Infection (Editorial). New England Journal of Medicine 
                362(24): 2316-2318. June 17, 2010.