HIV-1 infection and pregnancy in young women in Brazil: socioeconomic and drug resistance profiles in a cross-sectional study
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Objectives: To describe socioeconomic and
antiretroviral (ARV) drug resistance profiles among
young pregnant women infected with HIV-1.
Setting: A public health antenatal programme
responsible for screening ∼90 000 pregnant women
per year for nine different infectious diseases in Central
Western Brazil.
Participants: 96 young pregnant women
(15–24 years) infected with HIV-1.
Primary and secondary outcome measures:
Standard interviews and blood samples were taken at
the time of recruitment, at the first medical
appointment after confirmation of diagnosis of HIV-1
infection, and before ARV prophylaxis initiation. Clinical
and laboratory data were retrieved from medical files.
HIV-1 pol gene sequences (entire protease/PR, partial
reverse transcriptase/RT) were obtained from plasma
RNA. ARV resistance mutations (CPR/Stanford HIV-1;
International AIDS Society-USA databases) were
identified.
Results: The median age was 21 years; most reported
<8 years education; 73% were recently diagnosed.
Approximately 20% (19/96) presented late for antenatal
care (after 26 gestational weeks), while 49% reported
≥2 previous pregnancies. Possible heterosexual
transmission by an HIV-1 infected partner (17%) and
commercial sex work (2%) were reported. The median
of CD4 cell count was 526 cells/mm3
; the median viral
load was: 10 056 copies/mL in ARV-naïve (48/96)
patients and 5881 copies/mL in ARV-exposed (48/96)
patients. Two probable seroconversion cases during
pregnancy were identified in adolescents. One mother to-child transmission case (1.0%) was observed.
Transmitted drug resistance among ARV-naïve patients
was 9.3% (CI 95% 3.3% to 19.6%); secondary drug
resistance among ARV-exposed patients was 12.5%
(CI 95% 4.7% to 25.6%).
Conclusions: Despite high access to antenatal care,
the low socioeconomic-educational profiles seen in
these young HIV-1-infected women highlight the
necessity of improved public health educational and
preventive strategies regarding HIV infection and early
unplanned pregnancy.
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LIMA, Yanna Andressa Ramos et al. HIV-1 infection and pregnancy in young women in Brazil: socioeconomic and drug resistance profiles in a cross-sectional study. BMJ Open, London, v. 6, n. 7, e010837, 2016. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015- 010837. Disponível em: https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/6/7/e010837. Acesso em: 12 fev. 2025.