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The mother-to-child HIV transmission epidemic in Europe: evolving in the East and established in the West

Authors :
Pasquale Martinelli
Stefano Bianchi
Alessandra Viganò
Tessa Goetghebuer
M. De Santis
I. Grosch-Woerner
A. De Rossi
L. Bovicelli
Ramon Carreras
A. De Maria
J. L. Jimenez
Matilde Sansone
T. Schmitz
A. Oldakowska
S. Lindgren
B. Larru
G. P. Taylor
D Pérez-Tamarit
F. J. Nellen
Y. Canet
Tomasz Niemiec
Marcello Lanari
F. Ravagni Probizer
S. Ferrero
Galina Kiseleva
Yannick Manigart
Dante Bassetti
J. M. Perez
M. Casellas Caro
A. Mur
E. Belfrage
Antonio Ferrazin
Marco Rabusin
Marina Ravizza
Enrico Ferrazzi
Svetlana Posokhova
Bo Anzén
C. Gotta
Wilma Buffolano
I. Bates
Knut Lidman
Z. Penn
Patricia Barlow
Chiara Benedetto
A. Suy
M. Kreyenbroek
G. Scaravelli
C. Giaquinto
Kees Boer
G. Bentivoglio
Valeria Savasi
E. Prati
A. B. Bohlin
Osvalda Rampon
Andrej Stelmah
T. Kaleeva
M. C. Garcia-Rodriguez
A. Paya
Lars Navér
F. Asensi-Botet
A. Bucceri
Cecilia Tibaldi
M. Stegagno
M. Kaflik
G. Suarez
María Ángeles López-Vílchez
Oriol Coll
M. H. Godfried
A. Agangi
Salvatore Alberico
Giulia Masuelli
Vania Giacomet
Magdalena Marczyńska
S. Casteleyn
S. Marini
M. C. Otero
Jack Levy
Maria Bernardon
E. G. H. Lyall
Cornelia Feiterna-Sperling
L. Rancilio
Niels Henrik Valerius
J. Boguna
J. Mok
J. R. Arribas Lopez
Marzia Duse
J. Gonzalez Garcia
I. de Jose
R. D'Elia
G. Pardi
Marc Hainaut
R. Tiseo
Brunella Guerra
José M. Peña
Henriette J. Scherpbier
Anna Maccabruni
Claudia Fortuny
Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity
Paediatric Infectious Diseases / Rheumatology / Immunology
General Internal Medicine
Infectious diseases
Other Research
Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Source :
AIDS (London, England), 20(10), 1419-1427. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2006.

Abstract

Objectives: To carry out an epidemiological analysis of the emerging epidemic in an Eastern European country and to compare the approach to prevention of mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) with that in Western Europe. Design: Prospective cohort study established in 1985 in Western Europe and extended to Ukraine in 2000. Methods: Data on 5967 HIV-infected pregnant women and their infants (1251 from Ukraine and 4716 from Western/Central Europe) was analysed. Factors associated with transmission were identified with logistic regression. Results: HIV-infection among pregnant women enrolled in Western European centres has shifted from being largely injecting drug use (IDU)-related to heterosexually-acquired; in Ukraine IDU also gradually declined with women increasingly identified without specific risk factors. In Ukraine in 2000-2004 most (80%) women received single dose nevirapine (sdNVP) and/or short-course zidovudine prophylaxis [MTCT rate 4.2%; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.8-8.0 for sdNVP with short-course zidovudinel; 2% (n = 27) received antenatal HAART and 33% (n = 418) delivered by elective caesarean section (CS); in Western European centres 72% of women received HAART (MTCT rate 1.0%; 95% Cl, 0.4-1.9) and 66% delivered by elective CS during the same period. Conclusions: Our findings indicate distinct differences in the epidemics in pregnant women across Europe. The evolution of the MTCT epidemic in Ukraine does not appear to be following the same pattern as that in Western Europe in the 1980s and 1990s. Although uptake of preventive MTCT prophylaxis has been rapid in both Western Europe and Ukraine, substantial challenges remain in the more resource-constrained setting in Eastern Europe. (c) 2006 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Details

ISSN :
02699370
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a5d61c4e0f442914c7670d0f805e1bd