Journal Articles | April 2023

Antiretroviral Treatment of HIV/AIDS During Pregnancy

Overview

HIV infection in people who are pregnant remains a significant public health challenge. For all individuals with HIV, antiretroviral therapy (ART) should be initiated at HIV diagnosis and continued indefinitely. In 2021, approximately
19.7 million of the 38.4 million people worldwide living with HIV were females older than 15 years, and approximately 79% were of child bearing age.Each year, about 1.3 million people with HIV worldwide (and about 5000 in the US) give birth .For pregnant people with HIV, ART is essential for preserving maternal health and preventing perinatal and sexual HIV transmission. Without ART, approximately 15%to40%of pregnant or breastfeeding people with HIV will have a child who acquires HIV. However, the risk of perinatal and postpartum transmission is less than 2% if ART is used from early in pregnancy with sustained viral suppression (defined as confirmed HIV RNA level below the lower limits of detection of an ultra sensitive assay). Currently, approximately 81% of pregnant people with HIV are receiving ART worldwide. Increased ART use has resulted in a 50% reduction in new perinatal infections globally, from approximately 320 000 in 2010 to 160000 in 2021. Approximately 48% of the 160000 new perinatal infections in 2021 occurred in infants born to people who did not receive ART during pregnancy, often because they did not know their HIV status; 22% in infants born to people who first acquired HIV during pregnancy or breastfeeding; 22 %in infants born to people who stopped treatment during pregnancy or breastfeeding; and 8% in infants born to pregnant people taking ART without adequate viral suppression.

Created by:

Ahizechukwu C. Eke, MD, PhD, MPH; Shahin Lockman, MD; Lynne M. Mofenson, MD

Country:

Global

Topics:

HIV Treatment Optimization; Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission