Volmink J, Siegfried N L, van der Merwe L, Brocklehurst P
Stellenbosch University, Faculty of Health Sciences, PO Box 19063, Tygerberg, South Africa, 7505.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007 Jan 24(1):CD003510. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003510.pub2.
Antiretroviral drugs (ARV) reduce viral replication and can reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV either by lowing plasma viral load in pregnant women or through post-exposure prophylaxis in their newborns. In rich countries, highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has reduced the vertical transmission rates to around 1-2%, but HAART is not yet widely available in low and middle income countries. In these countries, various simpler and less costly antiretroviral regimens have been offered to pregnant women or to their newborn babies, or to both.
To determine whether, and to what extent, antiretroviral regimens aimed at decreasing the risk of mother-to-child transmission of HIV infection achieve a clinically useful decrease in transmission risk, and what effect these interventions have on maternal and infant mortality and morbidity.
We sought to identify all relevant studies regardless of language or publication status by searching the Cochrane HIV/AIDS Review Group Trials Register, The Cochrane Library, Medline, EMBASE and AIDSearch and relevant conference abstracts. We also contacted research organizations and experts in the field for unpublished and ongoing studies. The original review search strategy was updated in 2006.
Randomised controlled trials of any antiretroviral regimen aimed at decreasing the risk of mother-to-child transmission of HIV infection compared with placebo or no treatment.
Two authors independently selected relevant studies, extracted data and assessed trial quality. For the primary outcomes, we used survival analysis to estimate the probability of infants being infected with HIV (the observed proportion) at various specific time-points and calculated efficacy at a specific time as the relative reduction in the proportion infected. Efficacy, at a specific time, is defined as the preventive fraction in the exposed group compared to the reference group, which is the relative reduction in the proportion infected: 1-(Re/Rf). For those studies where efficacy and hence confidence intervals were not calculated, we calculated the approximate confidence intervals for the efficacy using recommended methods. For analysis of results that are not based on survival analyses we present the relative risk for each trial outcome based on the number randomised. No meta-analysis was conducted as no trial assessed the identical drug regimens.
Eighteen trials including 14,398 participants conducted in 16 countries were eligible for inclusion in the review. The first trial began in April 1991 and assessed zidovudine (ZDV) versus placebo and since then, the type, dosage and duration of drugs to be compared has been modified in each subsequent trial. Antiretrovirals versus placebo In breastfeeding populations, three trials found that:ZDV given to mothers from 36 to 38 weeks gestation, during labour and for 7 days after delivery significantly reduced HIV infection at 4-8 weeks (Efficacy 32.00%; 95% CI 0.64 to 63.36), 3 to 4 months (Efficacy 34.00%; 95% CI 6.56 to 61.44), 6 months (Efficacy 35.00%; 95% CI 9.52 to 60.48), 12 months (Efficacy 34.00%; 95% CI 8.52 to 59.48) and 18 months (Efficacy 30.00%; 95% CI 2.56 to 57.44).ZDV given to mothers from 36 weeks gestation and during labour significantly reduced HIV infection at 4 to 8 weeks (Efficacy 44.00%; 95% CI 8.72 to 79.28) and 3 to 4 months (Efficacy 37.00%; 95% CI 3.68 to 70.32) but not at birth.ZDV plus lamivudine (3TC) given to mothers from 36 weeks gestation, during labour and for 7 days after delivery and to babies for the first 7 days of life (PETRA 'regimen A') significantly reduced HIV infection (Efficacy 63.00%; 95% CI 41.44 to 84.56) and a combined endpoint of HIV infection or death (Efficacy 61.00%; 95% CI 41.40 to 80.60) at 4 to 8 weeks but these effects were not sustained at 18 months.ZDV plus 3TC given to mothers from the start of labour until 7 days after delivery and to babies for the first 7 days of life (PETRA 'regimen B') significantly reduced HIV infection (Efficacy 42.00%; 95% CI 12.60 to 71.40) and HIV infection or death at 4 to 8 weeks (Efficacy 36.00%; 95% CI 8.56 to 63.44) but the effects were not sustained at 18 months.ZDV plus 3TC given to mothers during labour only (PETRA 'regimen C') with no treatment to babies did not reduce the risk of HIV infection at either 4 to 8 weeks or 18 months. In non-breastfeeding populations, three trials found that:ZDV given to mothers from 14 to 34 weeks gestation and during labour and to babies for the first 6 weeks of life significantly reduced HIV infection in babies at 18 months (Efficacy 66.00%; 95% CI 34.64 to 97.36).ZDV given to mothers from 36 weeks gestation and during labour with no treatment to babies ('Thai-CDC regimen') significantly reduced HIV infection at 4 to 8 weeks (Efficacy 50.00%; 95% CI 12.76 to 87.24) but not at birthZDV given to mothers from 38 weeks gestation and during labour with no treatment to babies did not influence HIV transmission at 6 months. Longer versus shorter regimens using the same antiretrovirals One trial in a breastfeeding population found that:ZDV given to mothers during labour and to their babies for the first 3 days of life compared with ZDV given to mothers from 36 weeks and during labour (similar to 'Thai-CDC') resulted in HIV infection rates that were not significantly different at birth, 4-8 weeks, 3 to 4 months, 6 months and 12 months. Three trials in non-breastfeeding populations found that:ZDV given to mothers from 28 weeks gestation during labour and to infants for the first 3 days after birth compared with ZDV given to mothers from 35 weeks gestation through labour and to infants from birth to 6 weeks significantly reduced HIV infection rate at 6 months (Efficacy 45.00%; 95% CI 1.88 to 88.12) but compared with the same regimen ZDV given to mothers from 28 weeks gestation through labour and to infants from birth to 6 weeks did not result in a statistically significant difference in HIV infection at 6 months. ZDV given to mothers from 35 weeks gestation during labour and to infants for the first 3 days after birth was considered ineffective for reducing transmission rates and this regimen was discontinued.An antenatal/intrapartum course of ZDV used for a median of 76 days compared with an antenatal/intrapartum ZDV regimen used for a median 28 days with no treatment to babies in either group did not result in HIV infection rates that were significantly different at birth and at 3 to 4 months. In a programme where mothers were routinely receiving ZDV in the third trimester of pregnancy and babies were receiving one week of ZDV therapy, a single dose of nevirapine (NVP) given to mothers in labour and to their babies soon after birth compared with a single dose of NVP given to mothers only resulted in HIV infection rates that were not significantly different at birth and 6 months. However the reduction in risk of HIV infection or death at 6 months was marginally significant (Efficacy 45.00%; 95% CI -4.00 to 94.00). Antiretroviral regimens using different drugs and durations of treatment In breastfeeding populations, three trials found that:A single dose of NVP given to mothers at the onset of labour plus a single dose of NVP given to their babies immediately after birth ('HIVNET 012 regimen') compared with ZDV given to mothers during labour and to their babies for a week after birth resulted in lower HIV infection rates at 4-8 weeks (Efficacy 41.00%; 95% CI 11.60 to 70.40), 3-4 months (Efficacy 39.00%; 95% CI 11.56 to 66.44), 12 months (Efficacy 36.00%; 95% CI 8.56 to 63.44) and 18 months (Efficacy 39.00%; 95% CI 13.52 to 64.48). In addition, the NVP regimen significantly reduced the risk of HIV infection or death at 4-8 weeks (Efficacy 42.00%; 95% CI 14.56 to 69.44), 3 to 4 months (Efficacy 40.00%; 95% CI 14.52 to 65.48), 12 months (Efficacy 32.00%; 95% CI 8.48 to 55.52) and 18 months (Efficacy 33.00%; 95% CI 9.48 to 56.52). The 'HIVNET 012 regimen' plus ZDV given to babies for 1 week after birth compared with the 'HIVNET 012 regimen' alone did not result in a statistically significant difference in HIV infection at 4 to 8 weeks.A single dose of NVP given to babies immediately after birth plus ZDV given to babies for 1 week after birth compared with a single dose of NVP given to babies only significantly reduced the HIV infection rate at 4 to 8 weeks (Efficacy 37.00%; 95% CI 3.68 to 70.32). Five trials in non-breastfeeding populations found that:In a population in which mothers were receiving 'standard' ARV for HIV infection a single dose of NVP given to mothers in labour plus a single dose of NVP given to babies immediately after birth ('HIVNET 012 regimen') compared with placebo did not result in a statistically significant difference in HIV infection rates at birth and at 4 to 8 weeks. The 'Thai CDC regimen' compared with the 'HIVNET 012 regimen' did not result in a significant difference in HIV infection at 4 to 8 weeks.A single dose of NVP given to babies immediately after birth compared to ZDV given to babies for the first 6 weeks of life did not result in a significant difference in HIV infection rates at 4-8 weeks and 3 to 4 months.ZDV plus 3TC given to mothers in labour and for a week after delivery and to their infants for a week after birth (similar to 'PETRA regimen B') compared with NVP given to mothers in labour and immediately after delivery plus a single dose of NVP to their babies immediately after birth (similar to 'HIVNET 012 regimen') did not result in a significant difference in the HIV infection rate at 4 to 8 weeks. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
抗逆转录病毒药物(ARV)可降低病毒复制,通过降低孕妇血浆病毒载量或对其新生儿进行暴露后预防,减少HIV母婴传播。在富裕国家,高效抗逆转录病毒疗法(HAART)已将垂直传播率降至约1%-2%,但HAART在低收入和中等收入国家尚未广泛应用。在这些国家,已向孕妇或其新生儿或两者提供了各种更简单、成本更低的抗逆转录病毒治疗方案。
确定旨在降低HIV感染母婴传播风险的抗逆转录病毒治疗方案能否以及在何种程度上实现临床上有用的传播风险降低,以及这些干预措施对孕产妇和婴儿死亡率及发病率有何影响。
我们通过检索Cochrane HIV/AIDS综述组试验注册库、Cochrane图书馆、Medline、EMBASE和AIDSearch以及相关会议摘要,试图识别所有相关研究,无论其语言或发表状态如何。我们还联系了该领域的研究机构和专家,以获取未发表和正在进行的研究。原始综述检索策略于2006年更新。
与安慰剂或不治疗相比,任何旨在降低HIV感染母婴传播风险的抗逆转录病毒治疗方案的随机对照试验。
两位作者独立选择相关研究、提取数据并评估试验质量。对于主要结局,我们使用生存分析来估计婴儿在各个特定时间点感染HIV的概率(观察比例),并将特定时间的疗效计算为感染比例的相对降低。特定时间的疗效定义为暴露组与参考组相比的预防分数,即感染比例的相对降低:1-(Re/Rf)。对于那些未计算疗效及因此未计算置信区间的研究,我们使用推荐方法计算疗效的近似置信区间。对于非基于生存分析的结果分析,我们根据随机分组人数给出每个试验结局的相对风险。由于没有试验评估相同的药物方案,因此未进行荟萃分析。
16个国家进行的18项试验(包括14398名参与者)符合纳入综述的条件。第一项试验于1991年4月开始,评估齐多夫定(ZDV)与安慰剂,此后,每项后续试验中待比较的药物类型、剂量和疗程均有修改。
在母乳喂养人群中,三项试验发现:妊娠36至38周、分娩期间及产后7天给予母亲ZDV,可显著降低4至8周(疗效32.00%;95%CI 0.64至63.36)、3至4个月(疗效34.00%;95%CI 6.56至61.44)、6个月(疗效35.00%;95%CI 9.52至60.48)、12个月(疗效34.00%;95%CI 8.52至59.48)和18个月(疗效30.00%;95%CI
2.56至57.44)时的HIV感染率。妊娠36周及分娩期间给予母亲ZDV,可显著降低4至8周(疗效44.00%;95%CI 8.72至79.2
8)和3至4个月(疗效37.00%;95%CI 3.68至70.32)时的HIV感染率,但出生时无显著降低。妊娠36周、分娩期间及产后7天给予母亲ZDV加拉米夫定(3TC),并在婴儿出生后第1周给予(PETRA“方案A”),可显著降低4至8周时的HIV感染率(疗效63.00%;95%CI 41.44至84.56)以及HIV感染或死亡的综合终点(疗效61.00%;95%CI 41.40至80.60),但这些效果在18个月时未持续。从分娩开始至产后7天给予母亲ZDV加3TC,并在婴儿出生后第1周给予(PETRA“方案B”),可显著降低4至8周时的HIV感染率(疗效42.00%;95%CI 12.60至71.40)以及HIV感染或死亡的发生率(疗效36.00%;95%CI 8.56至63.44),但这些效果在18个月时未持续。仅在分娩期间给予母亲ZDV加3TC(PETRA“方案C”),不给婴儿治疗,在4至8周或18个月时均未降低HIV感染风险。在非母乳喂养人群中,三项试验发现:妊娠14至34周、分娩期间及婴儿出生后第1周给予母亲ZDV,可显著降低婴儿18个月时的HIV感染率(疗效66.00%;95%CI 34.64至97.36)。妊娠36周及分娩期间给予母亲ZDV,不给婴儿治疗(“泰国疾病控制中心方案”),可显著降低4至8周时的HIV感染率(疗效50.00%;95%CI 12.76至87.24),但出生时无显著降低。妊娠38周及分娩期间给予母亲ZDV,不给婴儿治疗,在6个月时对HIV传播无影响。
一项母乳喂养人群试验发现:分娩期间给予母亲ZDV并在婴儿出生后第1周给予,与妊娠36周及分娩期间给予母亲ZDV(类似于“泰国疾病控制中心方案”)相比,出生时、4至8周、3至4个月、6个月和12个月时的HIV感染率无显著差异。三项非母乳喂养人群试验发现:妊娠28周分娩期间给予母亲ZDV并在婴儿出生后第1周给予,与妊娠35周分娩期间给予母亲ZDV并在婴儿出生至6周给予相比,可显著降低6个月时的HIV感染率(疗效45.00%;95%CI 1.88至88.12),但与妊娠28周分娩期间给予母亲ZDV并在婴儿出生至6周给予相同方案相比,6个月时的HIV感染率无统计学显著差异。妊娠35周分娩期间给予母亲ZDV并在婴儿出生后第1周给予,被认为对降低传播率无效,该方案已停用。妊娠期间给予母亲ZDV的产前/产时疗程中位数为76天,与产前/产时ZDV疗程中位数为28天且两组均不给婴儿治疗相比,出生时和3至4个月时的HIV感染率无显著差异。在一个母亲在妊娠晚期常规接受ZDV且婴儿接受1周ZDV治疗的项目中,分娩时给予母亲及出生后不久给予婴儿单剂量奈韦拉平(NVP),与仅给予母亲单剂量NVP相比,出生时和6个月时的HIV感染率无显著差异。然而,6个月时HIV感染或死亡风险的降低略有显著意义(疗效45.00%;95%CI -4.00至94.00)。
在母乳喂养人群中,三项试验发现:分娩开始时给予母亲单剂量NVP并在婴儿出生后立即给予单剂量NVP(‘HIVNET 012方案’),与分娩期间给予母亲ZDV并在婴儿出生后给予1周ZDV相比,4至8周(疗效41.00%;95%CI 11.60至70.40)、3至4个月(疗效39.00%;95%CI 11.56至66.44)、12个月(疗效36.00%;95%CI 8.56至63.44)和18个月(疗效39.00%;95%CI 13.52至64.48)时的HIV感染率较低。此外,NVP方案显著降低了4至8周(疗效42.00%;95%CI 14.56至69.44)、3至4个月(疗效40.00%;95%CI 14.52至65.48)、12个月(疗效32.00%;95%CI 8.48至55.52)和18个月(疗效33.00%;95%CI 9.48至56.52)时HIV感染或死亡的风险。‘HIVNET 012方案’加婴儿出生后1周给予ZDV,与单独使用‘HIVNET 012方案’相比,4至8周时的HIV感染率无统计学显著差异。婴儿出生后立即给予单剂量NVP加婴儿出生后1周给予ZDV,与仅给予婴儿单剂量NVP相比,4至8周时的HIV感染率显著降低(疗效37.00%;95%CI 3.68至70.32)。五项非母乳喂养人群试验发现:在母亲接受‘标准’抗逆转录病毒治疗的HIV感染人群中,分娩时给予母亲单剂量NVP并在婴儿出生后立即给予单剂量NVP(‘HIVNET 012方案’),与安慰剂相比,出生时和4至8周时的HIV感染率无统计学显著差异。‘泰国疾病控制中心方案’与‘HIVNET 012方案’相比,4至8周时的HIV感染无显著差异。婴儿出生后立即给予单剂量NVP与婴儿出生后第1周给予ZDV相比,4至8周和3至4个月时的HIV感染率无显著差异。分娩时及产后1周给予母亲ZDV加3TC并在婴儿出生后1周给予(类似于‘PETRA方案B’),与分娩时及产后立即给予母亲NVP并在婴儿出生后立即给予单剂量NVP(类似于‘HIVNET 012方案’)相比,4至8周时的HIV感染率无显著差异。(摘要截断)