Journal of the International AIDS Society (Nov 2023)

Impact of point‐of‐care HIV viral load and targeted drug resistance mutation testing on viral suppression among Kenyan pregnant and postpartum women: results from a prospective cohort study (Opt4Mamas)

  • Rena C. Patel,
  • Patrick Oyaro,
  • Katherine K. Thomas,
  • Garoma Wakjira Basha,
  • James Wagude,
  • Irene Mukui,
  • Evelyn Brown,
  • Shukri A. Hassan,
  • Eunice Kinywa,
  • Fredrick Oluoch,
  • Francesca Odhiambo,
  • Boaz Oyaro,
  • Leonard Kingwara,
  • Enericah Karauki,
  • Nashon Yongo,
  • Lindah Otieno,
  • Grace C. John‐Stewart,
  • Lisa L. Abuogi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jia2.26182
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 11
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Lack of viral suppression (VS) among pregnant and breastfeeding women living with HIV poses challenges for maternal and infant health, and viral load (VL) monitoring via centralized laboratory systems faces many barriers. We aimed to determine the impact of point‐of‐care (POC) VL and targeted drug resistance mutation (DRM) testing in improving VS among pregnant and postpartum women on antiretroviral therapy. Methods We conducted a pre/post‐intervention prospective cohort study among 820 pregnant women accessing HIV care at five public‐sector facilities in western Kenya from 2019 to 2022. The pre‐intervention or “control” group consisted of standard‐of‐care (SOC) centralized VL testing every 6 months and the post‐intervention or “intervention” group consisted of a combined strategy of POC VL every 3 months, targeted DRM testing, and clinical management support. The primary outcome was VS (VL ≤1000 copies/ml) at 6 months postpartum; secondary outcomes included uptake and turnaround times for VL testing and sustained VS. Results At 6 months postpartum, 321/328 (98%) of participants in the intervention group and 339/347 (98%) in the control group achieved VS (aRR 1.00, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.98, 1.02). When assessing VS using a threshold of 1000 copies/ml) who underwent successful DRM testing in the intervention group, all (46/46, 100%) had some DRMs and 20 (43%) had major DRMs (of which 80% were nucleos(t)ide reverse transcriptase inhibitor mutations). POC VL testing uptake was high (>89%) throughout pregnancy, delivery, and postpartum periods, with a median turnaround time of 1 day (IQR 1, 4) for POC VL in the intervention group and 7 days (IQR 5, 9) for SOC VL in the control group. Sustained VS throughout follow‐up was similar between groups with either POC or SOC VL testing (90−91% for <1000 copies/ml, 62–70% for <40 copies/ml). Conclusions Our combined strategy markedly decreased turnaround time but did not increase VS rates, which were already very high, or sustained VS among pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV. Further research on how best to utilize POC VL and DRM testing is needed to optimize sustained VS among this population.

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