HIV Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Cohort Study To Assess The Impact Of A Breastfeeding Counselling And Support Strategy To Promote Exclusive Breastfeeding On Post-Natal Transmission Of HIV In African Women
Short courses of drugs can be given to HIV-infected pregnant women to reduce the chance of
HIV infection being passed to her child either during pregnancy or during the labour process.
However, children can also become infected by drinking the mother's breastmilk which contains
the HIV virus. In many poor, developing countries in Africa, breastfeeding is the normal way
of infant feeding and is vitally important because of the protection it gives to children
from other diseases such as diarrhoea and malnutrition. Ideally there would be a way to make
breastfeeding safer from HIV transmission without losing its other advantages.
A medical study recently suggested that HIV-infected women who exclusively breastfed their
children i.e. gave breastmilk but without any water, tea, formula milk or any solid foods did
not pass on the virus to their children to the same degree as women who MBF with these other
fluids and foods. It is important to confirm whether this observation is in fact true or not.
We hypothesize that exclusive breastfeeding by HIV-infected mothers carries a lower risk of
HIV transmission than mixed breastfeeding.
We propose to follow 2,100 HIV-infected pregnant women and also some HIV-uninfected women
from the time that they book at the clinic until 24 months of age. HIV-infected women who say
they intend to breastfeed and all the HIV-uninfected women will be visited at their homes by
breastfeeding counsellors both before and after delivery to support exclusive breastfeeding.
HIV-infected women who choose not to breastfeed will be helped by clinic staff to safely
replace all breastmilk with some other milk. An independent team will visit all mothers at
their homes and collect information about the way they feed their children. Blood samples
will be collected from the children at different times by a simple heel prick and the blood
stored on a piece of filter paper. By testing these samples and comparing with the type of
feeding at that time, we will be able to see when a child becomes infected and whether
exclusive breastfeeding gives any protection.
Short course antiretroviral regimens such as AZT (Thai regimen), or nevirapine (Uganda HIVNET
012 regimen) given to HIV-infected women in pregnancy can reduce in utero and intrapartum
transmission to their child by 40-50%. However, these gains are threatened by the continued
transmission of HIV through breast milk of poor HIV-infected women in Africa who have no
realistic choice but to breastfeed. A recent study from Durban compared for the first time,
Mother-to-child transmission of HIV (MTCT) rates in each of the 3 feeding groups viz.
exclusive breastfeeding (EBF), mixed breastfeeding (MBF) and formula feeding. The results of
this study showed that at 3 months the MTCT in EBF mothers was similar to that in mothers
giving only formula feeds, and the MTCT in EBF mothers was significantly lower than in those
MBF (14.6% vs. 24.1%). This suggested that EBF may carry no additional risk of MTCT of HIV1
over formula feeding. A prospective study is required to verify these findings.
We propose a cohort study of HIV-infected mothers and their infants, to examine the risk of
post-natal transmission of HIV in relation to infant feeding practices after mothers receive
intensive breastfeeding counselling and support to practise EBF until about 6 months of age
(the optimal duration for EBF).
The hypothesis being tested is: Exclusive breastfeeding by HIV-infected women carries no
additional risk of post-natal transmission of HIV than exclusive formula feeding.
The primary objectives of the study are to determine the effect of infant feeding practices
on HIV infection rates of infants at 6 and 22 weeks of age, and secondly to to determine the
infant survival rate at 24 months of age according to feeding practices and HIV status.
Secondary objectives are:
i) To determine the HIV infection rate of infants as measured of a sample collected within 72
hours of birth; ii) To determine the HIV transmission incidence attributable to the duration
of different feeding practices; iii) To determine the cumulative incidence of vertical
transmission in EBF, MBF and EFF infants; iv) To describe risk factors, other than feeding
practice, for post-natal transmission of HIV, including maternal and infant morbidity and
breast health; v) To assess the determinants of transmission in MBF adjusting for exposure
factors e.g. type and age of introduction of other food/milk; vi) To describe the morbidity
and growth of infants in relation to feeding practices and HIV status; and vii) To describe
adherence rates to EBF following a breastfeeding support intervention.
HIV infected women will be counselled according to the WHO/UNICEF/UNAIDS infant feeding
guidelines. All HIV-infected women and a random sub-sample of HIV-uninfected women will be
recruited antenatally. Those who choose to breastfeed will be visited frequently at home by a
team of breastfeeding counsellors before and after delivery to promote and support EBF.
HIV-infected mothers who choose not to breastfeed will be supported in their choice by
clinic-based staff. An independent team of field monitors will collect data weekly on feeding
practices and morbidity of all infants at home visits. Blood samples will be collected by
finger/heel prick and stored on filter paper prior to qualitative and quantitative estimation
of HIV viral content to determine the timing of transmission.
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