Tuesday

Exclusive breastfeeding may reduce risk of mother-to-child HIV transmission

A large study of mothers and children carried out in Zimbabwe lends further support to the view that it is probably better for mothers with HIV infection to breastfeed exclusively rather than engage in mixed feeding, as children exposed to a mixture of breastfeeding and other forms of feeding are more than 4 times as likely to have become infected with HIV at the age of 6 months when compared with infants exclusively breastfed.

The study, published in the April 29 edition of the journal AIDS, also showed that among children who were exclusively breastfed, only 1.31 per cent became infected with HIV during the first 6 months of life, suggesting that early weaning as practiced in a number of ongoing studies could reduce the risk of HIV transmission through breastfeeding.

A previous study carried out in South Africa (Coutsoudis 2001) showed that after 18 months of follow-up, infants who were breastfed exclusively were significantly less likely to become infected with HIV.

However, children exposed to any breastfeeding in this study were significantly more likely to be HIV-positive after 18 months than those who were formula fed.

Mixed feeding, in which infants are exposed to breast milk and to other liquids, as well as solid food and formula feed or cow's milk, is associated with a higher rate of HIV transmission, probably due to exposure to allergens that irritate the gut and lead to inflammation, thus increasing the risk of HIV infection from breast milk.

Mixed feeding is very common in African countries, and although solid food may be introduced as early as 3 months in many African countries, breastfeeding will frequently continue alongside solid foods for 18 months after birth.

Since exclusive formula feeding is not practical in many African settings due to the cost, lack of clean water, and the risk of social stigma if mothers do not breastfeed, safer alternatives to mixed feeding need to be identified.

The Zvitambo study was designed to assess the impact of vitamin A supplementation on maternal and infant health.

Also, data were collected to confirm whether exclusive breastfeeding was safer than mixed feeding.

The study enrolled 14,110 mother/infant pairs at the time of delivery; 4495 mothers (31.9 per cent) were HIV-positive at the time of enrollment.

Complete data were available for 2060 infants of HIV-positive mothers, with a further 918 excluded because they tested HIV-1 RNA positive by Week 6, 64 due to death before Week 6, and 515 due to the lack of an HIV-1 RNA test at Week 6.

The vast majority of additional exclusions were due to a single missed clinic visit.
HIV testing of mothers was carried out at enrollment, 6 weeks, 3 months, and at 3-monthly intervals thereafter, and blood samples were also taken from infants at these intervals.

Mothers did not automatically receive the results of their HIV antibody tests but were encouraged to request for them.

Mothers were questioned in detail at each visit about infant feeding practices, and feeding was only classified as exclusive breastfeeding if there was no more than 1 lapse from exclusive breastfeeding in any 3-month period, and if this lapse was confined to a liquid substitute for breast milk.

Any use of solid foods during the study was classified as mixed feeding.

Predominant breastfeeding was classified as breastfeeding plus liquid feeding, with any use of solid feeding during the study classified as mixed feeding.

"Our findings underscore the importance of supporting exclusive breastfeeding, particularly in areas of high HIV prevalence where many women do not know their HIV status, and among HIV-positive mothers who choose to breastfeed . . . Among breastfeeding women known to be HIV-positive, early breastfeeding cessation should be considered, along with support for nutritionally adequate, safe replacement feeding.

HIV-positive mothers with CD4+ cell counts less than 200 cells/mm3 should be strongly encouraged to consider antiretroviral treatment while breastfeeding, or replacement feeding from birth because of their very high risk of postnatal transmission," commented the investigators.

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