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Prophylaxis and treatment of HIV-1 infection in pregnancy: Swedish recommendations 2013

Authors :
Magnus Gisslén
Jan Albert
Anders Sönnerborg
Aylin Yilmaz
Olof Karlström
Ylva Böttiger
Leo Flamholc
Christina Carlander
Lena Lindborg
Bo Svennerholm
Lars Navér
Veronica Svedhem-Johansson
Filip Josephson
Karin Pettersson
Source :
Scandinavian journal of infectious diseases. 46(6)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Prophylaxis and treatment with antiretroviral drugs and elective caesarean section delivery have resulted in very low mother-to-child transmission of HIV during recent years. Updated general treatment guidelines and increasing knowledge about mother-to-child transmission have necessitated regular revisions of the recommendations for the prophylaxis and treatment of HIV-1 infection in pregnancy. The Swedish Reference Group for Antiviral Therapy (RAV) updated the recommendations from 2010 at an expert meeting on 11 September 2013. The most important revisions are the following: (1) ongoing efficient treatment at confirmed pregnancy may, with a few exceptions, be continued; (2) if treatment is initiated during pregnancy, the recommended first-line therapy is essentially the same as for non-pregnant women; (3) raltegravir may be added to achieve rapid reduction in HIV RNA; (4) vaginal delivery is recommended if at34 gestational weeks and HIV RNA is50 copies/ml and no obstetric contraindications exist; (5) if HIV RNA is50 copies/ml and delivery is at34 gestational weeks, intravenous zidovudine is not recommended regardless of the delivery mode; (6) if HIV RNA is50 copies/ml close to delivery, it is recommended that the mother should undergo a planned caesarean section, intravenous zidovudine, and oral nevirapine, and the infant should receive single-dose nevirapine at 48-72 h of age and post-exposure prophylaxis with 2 drugs; (7) if delivery is preterm at34 gestational weeks, a caesarean section delivery should if possible be performed, with intravenous zidovudine and oral nevirapine given to the mother, and single-dose nevirapine given to the infant at 48-72 h of age, as well as post-exposure prophylaxis with 2 additional drugs.

Details

ISSN :
16511980
Volume :
46
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scandinavian journal of infectious diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e761a1322b674405d78ac203c84ce570