South African Medical Journal (Jul 2018)

Unmet needs of highrisk mothers reduce success of antiretroviral treatment in HIVinfected infants

  • Z Mvo,
  • V Ntlantsana,
  • N Bengu,
  • J Millar,
  • J Roider,
  • R Bhoola,
  • M Krishna,
  • Y Graza,
  • J van Lobenstein,
  • C Kapongo,
  • C Kogielambal,
  • K Sprenger,
  • M Archary,
  • T Ndung'u,
  • P Goulder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7196/SAMJ.2018.v108i8.13376
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 108, no. 8
pp. 609 – 610

Abstract

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In the era of effective prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, the same psychosocioeconomic factors that predispose to mother-to-child transmission also substantially increase the likelihood of antiretroviral therapy failure in infected infants. For HIV-infected infants to benefit from early infant diagnosis and treatment initiation, into which much funding and effort is now invested, it is vital that these unmet needs of high-risk mothers are urgently attended to. From an ongoing study of early infant diagnosis and treatment following in utero transmission in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, we describe four cases to highlight these challenges facing transmitting mothers that contribute to treatment failure in their infants.