Abstract:
Objectives
We examined uptake of prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) services,
predictors of missed opportunities, and infant HIV transmission attributable to missed
opportunities along the PMTCT cascade across South Africa.
Methods
A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 4–8 week old infants receiving first immunisations
in 580 nationally representative public health facilities in 2010. This included maternal
interviews and testing infants’ dried blood spots for HIV. A weighted analysis was
performed to assess uptake of antenatal and perinatal PMTCT services along the PMTCT
cascade (namely: maternal HIV testing, CD4 count test/result, and receiving maternal and infant antiretroviral treatment) and predictors of dropout. The population attributable fraction
associated with dropouts at each service point are estimated.
Results
Of 9,803 mothers included, 31.7% were HIV-positive as identified by reactive infant antibody
tests. Of these 80.4%received some form of maternal and infant antiretroviral treatment.
More than a third (34.9%) of mothers dropped out from one or more steps in the
PMTCT service cascade. In a multivariable analysis, the following characteristics were
associated with increased dropout from the PMTCT cascade: adolescent (<20 years) mothers,
low socioeconomic score, low education level, primiparous mothers, delayed first antenatal
visit, homebirth, and non-disclosure of HIV status. Adolescent mothers were twice
(adjusted odds ratio: 2.2, 95% confidence interval: 1.5–3.3) as likely to be unaware of their
HIV-positive status and had a significantly higher rate (85.2%) of unplanned pregnancies
compared to adults aged 20 years (55.5%, p = 0.0001). A third (33.8%) of infant HIV infections
were attributable to dropout in one or more steps in the cascade.
Conclusion
A third of transmissions attributable to missed opportunities of PMTCT services can be prevented
by optimizing the uptake of PMTCT services. Identified risk factors for low PMTCT service uptake should be addressed through health facility and community-level interventions,
including raising awareness, promoting women education, adolescent focused interventions,
and strengthening linkages/referral-system between communities and health
facilities.