March 05, 2013
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‘Option B+’ program in Malawi increased access to ART for women

ATLANTA — Malawi’s expansion of its antiretroviral therapy public health initiative to include a test-and-treat program for all HIV-positive pregnant or breast-feeding women regardless of their CD4 count and clinical status — referred to as “Option B+” — rapidly increased access to efficacious antiretroviral therapy treatments, researchers reported here.

Perspective from Elizabeth Connick, MD

“Option B+ has increased the number of HIV-infected pregnant and breast-feeding women accessing antiretroviral treatment by 820% in the first 18 months of implementation,” technical advisor Beth Tippett Barr, DrPH, the CDC’s biomedical HIV prevention officer, told Infectious Disease News.

Beth A Barr, DrPH 

Beth Tippett Barr

The 2010 revised WHO guidelines for preventing mother-to-child transmission (PMTC) of HIV made CD4 count testing a prerequisite for PMTCT. However, Malawi health officials implemented Option B+ to include all HIV-positive women who are pregnant or breast-feeding, which removed barriers to ART access, according to Tippett Barr.

Between July and December 2012, the total number of women receiving antiretroviral drugs during pregnancy increased to 20,687 from 13,910 in January to June 2011 — the 6-month period before Option B+ was implemented. By March 2012, 100% of pregnant women with HIV who received antiretroviral treatment were prescribed ART vs. the 6 months before Option B+, when only 2,398 (17%) received ART. From October to December 2012, 93% of all known pregnant women with HIV received antiretroviral drugs in pregnancy or at delivery. Among those women, 40% were already receiving ART when entering antenatal care.

During the same time period, 25% of women initiating ART under Option B+ were in the breast-feeding period. According to the Malawi Ministry of Health, 79% of women who enrolled in Option B+ in 2011 were retained in the treatment at 12 months, which was comparable to the entire ART cohort, whose 12-month ART retention was 80%.

“Option B+ women have continued on treatment at a rate almost the same as all patients receiving antiretroviral treatment,” Tippett Bar said.

According to the CDC, Malawi was the first country to initiate Option B+, but other countries have now started implementation of Option B+, including Rwanda, Uganda, Haiti, Ethiopia and Tanzania.  Several other countries are also considering implementation of Option B+.

– by John Schoen

For more information:

Barr BT. #82. Presented at: 20th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections; March 3-6, 2013; Atlanta.

CDC. MMWR. 2013;62:141-156.

Beth Tippett Barr, DrPH can be reached at bbarr@mw.cdc.gov.

Disclosure: Tippett Barr reports no relevant financial disclosures.