1. Association of pregnancy with engagement in HIV care among women with HIV in the UK: a cohort study
- Author
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Helen Peters, Ashini Fox, Roy Trevelion, Ian Fairley, Deenan Pillay, Jonathan Ainsworth, Fiona Burns, C Sabin, Adrian Palfreeman, Teresa Hill, Richard Gilson, Clifford Leen, Andrew N. Phillips, Duncan Churchill, Jane Anderson, David Chadwick, Sris Allan, Phillip Hay, A Ustianowski, Sophie Jose, Dushyant Mital, Mark Gompels, Stephen Kegg, Yvonne Gilleece, Achim Schwenk, Rajesh Hembrom, Claire Thorne, Ade Apoola, Hajra Okhai, Shema Tariq, Chloe Orkin, Ashley Price, Margaret A. Johnson, Mark T. Nelson, Caroline A. Sabin, Frank A. Post, Jillian Pritchard, John P. Walsh, Anjum Tariq, David Dunn, Rageshri Dhairyawan, and Valerie Delpech
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Immunology ,Psychological intervention ,Ethnic group ,HIV Infections ,Logistic regression ,Cohort Studies ,Pregnancy ,Virology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pregnancy Complications, Infectious ,Child ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,Attendance ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Infectious Diseases ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
BACKGROUND Women with HIV face challenges in engaging in HIV care post partum. We aimed to examine changes in engagement in HIV care through clinic attendance before, during, and after pregnancy, compared with matched women with HIV who had never had a recorded pregnancy. METHODS In this cohort study, we describe changes in engagement in HIV care before, during, and after pregnancy among women with HIV from the UK Collaborative HIV Cohort (CHIC) study from 25 HIV clinics in the UK with a livebirth reported to the National Surveillance of HIV in Pregnancy and Childhood between Jan 1, 2000, and Dec 31, 2017. To investigate whether changes were specific to HIV, we compared these changes to those over equivalent periods among non-pregnant women with HIV in the UK CHIC study matched for ethnicity, year of conception, age, CD4 cell count, viral suppression, and antiretroviral therapy use. Analyses were via logistic regression using generalised estimated equations with an interaction between case-control status (pregnant women vs non-pregnant women) and pregnancy or pseudo pregnancy (for non-pregnant women) stage. FINDINGS 1116 matched pairs of pregnant and non-pregnant women were included (median age 34 years [IQR 30-38], 80·1% Black African, 12·5% white). 69 330 person-months of follow-up were recorded, 25 412 in the before stage, 18 897 during, and 25 021 after pregnancy or pseudo pregnancy stages. Among pregnant women, the proportion of time engaged in care increased during pregnancy (8477 [90·5%] of 9371 person-months) and after pregnancy (10 501 [84·6%] of 12 407), compared with before pregnancy (9979 [78·5%] of 12 707). Among non-pregnant women in the control group, engagement in HIV care remained stable across the three equivalent stages (9688 [76·3%] of 12 705 person-months before pseudo pregnancy; 7463 [78·3%] of 9526 during pseudo pregnancy; and 9892 [78·4%] of 12 614 after pseudo pregnancy). The association of engagement in HIV care with pregnancy or pseudo pregnancy stage differed significantly by case-control status (pinteraction
- Published
- 2021
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