Oral pre-exposure prophylaxis initiation, continuation and adherence among pregnant and postpartum women receiving antenatal and postnatal care: A systematic review

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In 2023, one-fourth of new HIV acquisitions in children globally resulted from vertical transmission following incident HIV during pregnancy or breastfeeding. Oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with tenofovir disoproxil and emtricitabine is safe and effective in pregnancy and postpartum, with long-acting options emerging. Integrating PrEP into antenatal and postnatal care (ANC/PNC) is a crucial person-centred approach to prevent maternal HIV acquisition and vertical transmission. This review summarizes oral PrEP initiation, continuation and adherence among pregnant and postpartum women receiving ANC/PNC. METHODS: We systematically searched three databases for English-language quantitative studies published between 1 January 2015 and 28 March 2024. Eligible studies focused on pregnant and/or postpartum women accessing PrEP through ANC/PNC, and reported on initiation (receipt of prescription or self-reported use), continuation (persistent use over time) and/or adherence (self-reported and/or objective). RESULTS: We identified 481 articles; 12 studies from Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi and South Africa met our inclusion criteria. Study heterogeneity (e.g. definitions used, population included, follow-up time) precluded meta-analysis. All studies enrolled pregnant women; three also enrolled postpartum women. Median gestational age at enrolment ranged from 20 to 26 weeks, and follow-up periods from 1 month post-enrolment to 12 months postpartum. Oral PrEP initiation ranged from 14% to 84%. Continuation at 3 months ranged from 22% to 90% and declined postpartum in all studies. Self-reported adherence (daily use) ranged from 11% to 81% in the past 7 or 30 days at 1 month (four studies) and from 54% to 81% at 3 months (two studies). Objectively measured adherence ranged from 34% to 62% for detectable tenofovir or tenofovir diphosphate levels at 1 month (three studies). One Kenyan trial demonstrated that universal versus risk-based offers of oral PrEP resulted in similar PrEP use and HIV incidence. Two-way SMS communication (Kenya) and real-time adherence biofeedback counselling using urine tenofovir testing (South Africa) enhanced PrEP continuation/adherence compared to standard-of-care. DISCUSSION: Integrating oral PrEP into ANC/PNC showed high initiation among pregnant/postpartum women; however, continuation and adherence were suboptimal. CONCLUSIONS: Oral PrEP integration into ANC/PNC can reach pregnant/postpartum women. Maximizing its impact will require offering long-acting PrEP, person-centred interventions to support adherence/continued use and differentiated delivery responsive to women’s needs. PROSPERO NUMBER: CRD42024513442.

Authors

Rotsaert A, Essack Z, Bosman S, Davey DJ, Hensen B

Year

2025

Topics

  • Epidemiology and Determinants of Health
    • Determinants of Health
  • Determinants of Health
    • Social support
    • Health services
  • Population(s)
    • Women
    • General HIV- population
  • Prevention, Engagement and Care Cascade
    • Engagement and Care Cascade
    • Prevention
  • Engagement and Care Cascade
    • Treatment
  • Prevention
    • Biomedical interventions
  • Health Systems
    • Governance arrangements
    • Delivery arrangements

Link

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