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Perinatal HIV Screening in Colorado: Help Needed!. Kay Kinzie MSN, FNP-C Pregnancy Coordinator Children’s Hospital Immunodeficiency Program. A Word About “CHIP”. Existing since 1992 to care for HIV infected children, Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials site
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Perinatal HIV Screening in Colorado: Help Needed! Kay Kinzie MSN, FNP-C Pregnancy Coordinator Children’s Hospital Immunodeficiency Program
A Word About “CHIP” • Existing since 1992 to care for HIV infected children, Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials site • After participation in PACTG 076 trial, increased involvement in maternal HIV screening and care • Multidisciplinary team now caring for HIV positive children, youth, expectant mothers, and exposed newborns • Contracted by Colorado Department of Health and Environment for resource on perinatal HIV testing.
HIV Transmission • Mucosal/parenteral contact with infected: • Blood • Breast Milk • Semen • Vaginal Fluid
Fever 96% Adenopathy 74% Pharyngitis 70% Rash 70% Myalgias 54% Diarrhea 32% Headache 32% N+V 27% Hepatomegaly, Splenomegaly 14% Weight Loss 13% Thrush 12% Neurologic 12% Symptoms of Acute Retroviral Syndrome
Hematologic Events in Adult Acute HIV Retroviral Syndrome • High viral replication • Sharp initial decline in CD4 cells • Development of HIV-specific antibodies • 6 weeks- 3 months • “Window” period • Viral “set point”
Early Asymptomatic HIV Disease in Adults • 50% progression to AIDS within 8-10 years • 5% “rapid progressors” • 5% long term “non progressors” • Long latency period • Asymptomatic- “HIV Positive” • Ability to infect other hosts
HIV/AIDS in Colorado Epidemiologic Profile CDPHE June 2004 Comparing Gender Characteristics HIV 1999-2003 AIDS 1985-1989 Female 5% Female (196) 16% Male (1049) 84% Male 95%
Demographics of HIV-infected Women who Delivered a Child in Colorado by Percent
Children Born to HIV-infected Women in Colorado by Area of Residence at Birth, Colorado 6/30/2006 • 30/64 counties had births to HIV infected women
Pediatric HIV Infection • > 92% due to vertical transmission • Acute Retroviral Syndrome superimposed on immature infant immune system • High levels of HIV viremia • Longer duration of viremia (years) before achievement of viral “set point” • 20% of infants progress to AIDS within 4 years • Median age at death 11 months • PCP pneumonia- 50% mortality rate in infants
Vertical (Mother to Child) HIV Transmission • 25- 30% risk without treatment • Timing • Antepartum 30% • Acute retroviral syndrome or advanced disease • Intrapartum 70% • Maternal-fetal microtransfusion • Fetal mucous membrane or percutaneous exposure • Breastfeeding 16% • Infection in early breastfeeding period, incremental risk with duration of nursing
Strategies to Interrupt Vertical HIV Transmission • Reduce maternal HIV viral load • Antepartum maternal combination ARV • Chemoprophylaxis of neonate • Maternal intrapartum ARV meds • Zidovudine, Nevirapine, others • * Continue infant dosing until 6 weeks of age • Reduce fetal/neonatal exposure to infected fluids • Limit duration of ruptured maternal membranes (4 hrs) • Limit invasive procedures (amnio, SVE, internal monitors) • Elective C Section at 38 weeks • Avoid breastfeeding
Rate of Perinatal HIV-1 Transmissionby ARV Therapy Category Placebo No Rx ZDV ZDV ZDV ZDV Combo - PI -NVP ZDV + 3TC Combo+ PI +NVP ACTG 076 ACTG 185 French Trial WITS ACTG 316
Current estimated risk of vertical HIV transmission • No therapy, vaginal delivery 25 % • ZDV prophylaxis 5-8 % • ZDV, elective Cesarean 2% • Undetectable viral load 0.9% • < 10,000 copies/ml + C/S 2% • > 10,000 copies/ml + C/S 4.5% ACOG Technical Bulletin 8/99, ACTG case review 1998
Timing of ARV Prophylaxis is Linked to Infant Outcome • Retrospective Epidemiologic Study 8/1/1995-1/1/1997 • New York State • 939 infants with perinatal HIV exposure • Moms with no prenatal care or chose to limit meds Wade, NA. Abbreviated regimens of zidovudine prophylaxis and perinatal transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus. NEJM 1998: 339 (20).
The “Take Home” • 92% of pediatric HIV result of vertical transmission • With intervention, risk of vertical transmission can be reduced to < 1% • Timing of interventions significantly affects infant outcomes: 48 hour window • Effective maternal screening is key
Current Testing and Treatment Guidelines aidsinfo.nih.gov
Endorsements for Rapid Testing of Women with Unknown HIV Status at Labor/Delivery • American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists • Centers for Disease Control, Department of Health and Human Services • The Office of the Inspector General(OIG) in the Department of Health and Human Services • Institute of Medicine (IOM) • American Academy of Pediatrics • Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
Vertical HIV Transmission Continues • CDC estimates 280-370* infants continue to be born annually with HIV infection • Missed opportunities for maternal care • Mother not offered or refused HIV testing • Mothers with no prenatal care (40%) * Estimates based upon report of Office of Inspector General, Department of Health and Human Services 2002
Live Births in Colorado by HIV Test and Prenatal Care Status, 2005CDPHE Birth Certificates/Vital RecordsData • 69,210 live births in Colorado • 11,263 (16.6%) did not receive a prenatal HIV test • 795 (1.2%) did not receive prenatal care • 400 (0.3%) lacked both a prenatal HIV test and prenatal care
Prenatal HIV Testing: Birth Certificate Data • 2005 testing varied from 53.4% to 99.8% • Average rate 85% • Low rates in some metropolitan sites in counties with higher case numbers
PRAMS • Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring Survey • Randomized selected sample • Maternal interviews • Results (1999 data, CDPHE) • 72 % of mothers reported they had been tested for HIV • 7% unsure
Timing of HIV Testing in HIV-infected Women who Delivered a Child in Colorado by HIV Status of Child, 6/30/2006
Case 1 • Married, employed 26 y/o primigravida in private MFM practice. • Reports recent (within 1 year) HIV screen negative; test done for immigration purposes • Declined HIV testing x2 • Uncomplicated pregnancy, delivery; nursing infant • Infant hospitalized with pneumonia at age 4 mos • Opportunistic pathogen (PCP) • Child tested for HIV and found to be infected • Parents subsequently tested, both positive
Case 2 • 25 yo G4 P3 new to state • Presents in labor, no local prenatal care • Routine prenatal panel and HIV test sent • Vaginal delivery within hours of arrival • Maternal HIV antibody screen positive on postpartum day 3; confirmed on postpartum day 5 • Infant infected
Case 3 • 22 you G3 P2 presents in labor with no prenatal care • Rapid HIV antibody performed, result positive • Mother counseled re: possible infection • Intrapartum meds given • Infant placed on prophylaxis after delivery • Maternal infection confirmed on pp day 3 • Infant uninfected
Rapid HIV testing at delivery is needed • Improved efforts to screen all expectant and breastfeeding mothers is needed • Rapid testing may positively impact prenatal testing rates once initiated
Issues with HIV Rapid Testing at Delivery • Availability of rapid test for clinical use • Obtaining counseling and consent during labor • Ordering and performing the test • Confidentiality and informing of positive results • Treatment decisions for mother and baby must be made on initial, unconfirmed result • Treatment availability (parenteral, pediatric formulations) • Adequate follow up of family after discharge • Cost/reimbursement issues
Collaborative Project • Combined efforts of CDPHE and CHIP • Systematic outreach, training and support to delivery sites around CO: • Train staff to perform pretest counseling/consent • Initiate rapid HIV testing when needed • 24 hour access to expert perinatal treatment consultants via pager/answering service • Assist with treatment, follow up testing and referral for infected/affected families
An Invitation • Calls welcome to discuss how our project can assist your site • Implementation of rapid HIV testing at delivery sites • Assistance to referring providers and clinics to continue/improve universal voluntary HIV prenatal screening • Kay Kinzie MSN, FNP-CPregnancy Coordinator, CHIP 13123 E 16th Ave Box B055 Aurora CO 80045 720-777-6006 • 24 Hour Perinatal HIV Pager: 1-888-787-5947