1. A Pilot Study to Evaluate the Impact of the HIV Infant Tracking System (HITSystem 2.0) on Priority Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (PMTCT) Outcomes.
- Author
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Finocchario-Kessler S, Brown M, Maloba M, Nazir N, Wexler C, Goggin K, Dariotis JK, Mabachi N, Lagat S, Koech S, and Gautney B
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Infant, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical prevention & control, Kenya epidemiology, Pilot Projects, Pregnancy, HIV Infections prevention & control, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious prevention & control
- Abstract
We assessed the preliminary impact of the adapted HIV Infant Tracking System (HITSystem v2.0) intervention on prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) outcomes using a matched cluster randomized design in two Kenyan government hospitals. Between November 2017 and June 2019, n = 157 pregnant women with HIV were enrolled and followed from their first PMTCT appointment until 12-weeks postpartum. Data from 135 women were analyzed (HITSystem 2.0: n = 53, standard of care (SOC): n = 82), excluding eight deaths, eight pregnancy losses, and six transfers/moves. The primary outcome, complete PMTCT retention, is an aggregate measure of attendance at all scheduled antenatal appointments, hospital-based delivery, and infant HIV-testing before 7-weeks postnatal. HITSystem 2.0 participants were more likely to receive complete PMTCT services compared to SOC (56.6% vs. 17.1% p < 0.001). In multivariate modeling, HITSystem 2.0 was the strongest predictor of complete PMTCT retention (aOR 5.7, [1.2-90.8], p = 0.032). SOC participants had 1.91 increased hazard rate of PMTCT disengagement; (aHR 6.8, [2.2-21.1]; p < 0.001).
- Published
- 2021
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