Researchers from the London School
of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine report that the risk of pregnancy-related
death is eight times higher for HIV-infected women than for uninfected women.
In sub-Saharan countries with high HIV prevalence, one in four
pregnancy-related deaths can be attributed to HIV. The study authors based
their conclusions on a systematic review of 23 studies that had collected data
on the risk of pregnancy-related death among uninfected and HIV-infected women.
Many of the 23 studies were
conducted in areas of the world where a “verbal autopsy” from family members is
the most common form of death report. Most of the HIV-infected women in the 23
studies were not taking antiretroviral therapy and were in an “advanced stage”
of the disease. Little is known about the effects of HIV on pregnancy; it is
not clear whether HIV causes more complications for pregnant women or whether
pregnancy triggers the HIV progression.
The review compared death during
pregnancy and the postpartum period among HIV-infected women and uninfected
women to calculate the relative risk of death and the prevalence of HIV, and
then used the pooled relative risk data from the meta-analysis to predict the
effect of HIV on pregnancy-related death at the population level. This
calculation method removes assumptions about HIV being related to or
coincidental to pregnancy. Severe anemia and TB can cause maternal death and
HIV-related death indirectly. Study authors suggest that future studies focus on
identifying HIV-related deaths from “verbal autopsies.”
Previous estimates of
pregnancy-related death among HIV-infected women were not based on empirical
data and did not distinguish between pregnancy-related deaths and maternal
death that was incidental to the pregnancy.
The full report, “The Contribution
of HIV to Pregnancy-Related Mortality: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis,”
was published online in the journal AIDS (2013; doi:
10.1097/qad.0b013e32835fd940).
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dedicated to enhancing the quality of life for HIV positive individuals and
empowering people to make healthy choices to prevent the spread of the HIV
virus. To learn more about The Friends of AIDS Foundation, please visit: http://www.friendsofaids.org.
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