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AIDS:
12 June 2006 - Volume 20 - Issue 9 - p 1281-1288
doi: 10.1097/01.aids.0000232236.26630.35
Epidemiology and Social

Maternal single-dose nevirapine versus placebo as part of an antiretroviral strategy to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission in Botswana

Shapiro, Roger L; Thior, Ibou; Gilbert, Peter B; Lockman, Shahin; Wester, Carolyn; Smeaton, Laura M; Stevens, Lisa; Heymann, S Jody; Ndung'u, Thumbi; Gaseitsiwe, Simani; Novitsky, Vladimir; Makhema, Joseph; Lagakos, Stephen; Essex, Max

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Abstract

Background: Single-dose nevirapine given to women and infants reduces mother-to-child HIV transmission, but nevirapine resistance develops in a large percentage of women.

Objective: To determine whether the maternal nevirapine dose could be eliminated in the setting of zidovudine prophylaxis.

Design, setting, and participants: A 2 × 2 factorial, randomized, clinical trial, with a double-blinded peripartum factor designed to assess the equivalence of maternal single-dose nevirapine versus placebo with respect to HIV transmission. A total of 709 HIV-infected pregnant women were randomized from four district hospitals in Botswana, resulting in 694 live first-born infants. HAART was available for women with AIDS.

Intervention: All women received a background of zidovudine from 34 weeks' gestation through delivery, and all infants received single-dose nevirapine at birth and zidovudine from birth through 1 month. Women were randomized to receive either single-dose nevirapine or placebo during labor.

Main outcome measures: The primary endpoint was infant HIV infection by the 1-month visit.

Results: Of the 694 infants in this equivalence study, 15 (4.3%) of 345 in the maternal nevirapine arm were HIV infected by 1 month, versus 13 (3.7%) of 349 in the maternal placebo arm (95% confidence interval for difference, -2.4% to 3.8%), meeting pre-determined equivalence criteria. Nevirapine resistance at 1 month postpartum was detected in 45% of a random sample of women who received nevirapine.

Conclusions: In the setting of maternal zidovudine and infant zidovudine plus single-dose nevirapine, infant HIV infection rates were similar whether women received single-dose nevirapine or placebo. This strategy avoids the potential for maternal nevirapine resistance.

© 2006 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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