Title: Perinatal HIV Prevention in New York
1Perinatal HIV Prevention in New York
- Roberta Glaros
- New York State Department of Health, AIDS
Institute - March 1, 2004
2OVERVIEW
3NYS Survey of Childbearing WomenHIV Prevalence
by Year of Delivery 1988 - 2001
Since 1990, there has been a 60 decline in the
number of HIV-infected women giving birth in NYS
(1,898 in 1990 to 744 in 2002)
Source New York State Perinatal HIV Surveillance
Program
4(No Transcript)
5 6HIV Counseling and Testing of Pregnant Women and
Newborns in New York State
Regulatory requirement HIV counseling of all
pregnant women with HIV testing
strongly recommended
Newborn HIV Screening Program
Regulatory requirement expedited HIV testing in
labor, delivery with results available within 12
hours
No HIV test history documented
Mother Consent required Newborn No consent
required
7Birth Facility Reporting System
8 Maternal/Newborn HIV Test History Assessment (1)
- Prenatal Test History Categories
- A. Tested negative during this pregnancy
- B. Tested positive
- C. Not tested during this pregnancy
- D. Test history unknown/not documented
- No further testing required for A and B
- In-hospital testing indicated for C and D
9Maternal/Newborn HIV Test History Assessment (2)
- In-hospital Test History Categories
- E. Mother tested with consent
- F. Newborn tested
- G. Testing not needed (A and B boxes)
10Reports to DOH
- Transfer maternal/newborn test history to DOH on
the Newborn Screening Blood Collection Form
(A-G boxes replicated) - Report all preliminary positive test results to
DOH on the Report on Preliminary Positive HIV
Test Results form
11Report on Preliminary Positive Test Results
- In hospital test history - mother or baby tested
- Date and time of mothers admission
- Date and time of specimen collection
- HIV screening test(s) used and results
- Date and time results received
- Date and time of initiation of therapy
- Confirmatory test result
12 DATA ANALYSIS 2002
13Comprehensive Newborn HIV Testing Program - 2002
(1)
- Of the 249,537 specimens submitted to the Newborn
Screening Program - 94.2 (235,187) of mothers had been tested during
this pregnancy - 5.8 (14,350) were eligible for expedited testing
in labor and delivery
14Comprehensive Newborn HIV Testing Program - 2002
(2)
- Of the 14,350 eligible for expedited testing in
labor and delivery - 75.5 (10,841) testing on mother
- 11.1 (1,587) testing on newborn
- 13.4 (1,922) missed
- Among the 1,922 missed were 3 HIV-exposed
infants who were identified through the Newborn
Screening Program
15Expedited Testing2001-2002 (1)
- Regulation allowed a maximum turnaround time of
48 hours - 1400 HIV-infected women gave birth in this
period - 100 mother/infant pairs were identified as
HIV-infected/exposed through expedited testing - 2.5 hours median time from admission to ET
specimen collection
16Expedited Testing2001-2002 (2)
- 20 hour median time from specimen collection to
return of preliminary positive results - 22.5 hour median time from birth to ART for 96
infants who received therapy
17Expedited Testing2001-2002 (3)
- 100 HIV-infected mothers and 103 exposed infants
(3 sets of twins) - 37 (36) received timely ARV
- 13 (12.6) received intrapartum and newborn ARV
- 24 (23.3) received newborn ARV within 12 hours
of birth
18Expedited Testing2001-2002 (4)
- 9 of the 103 infants (8.7) were HIV-infected
- 5.4 transmission rate for the 37 infants who
received intrapartum ARV or newborn within 12
hours - 10.6 for the 66 infants who received newborn ARV
after 12 hours of life
19FROM DATA TO INTERVENTIONS
20USES OF DATA
- Performance improvement
- Program evaluation
- Regulatory action
- Targeting of resources
- Changes in policy
21Policy Change
- Emergency regulation effective 11/1/03 changes
maximum turnaround time for expedited testing in
L D from 48 hours to 12 hours after the
mothers consent or birth of child - Rationale for the change
- Availability of rapid test
- Data on performance of expedited testing
22Regulatory Monitoring12-Hour Turn-Around-Time
- Chart reviews targeted to
- Birth facilities with high rates of expedited
testing (based on hospital reports) - Facilities which have already been cited for
non-compliance with expedited testing - Review of policies and procedures from facilities
with extremely low rates of expedited testing
23Conclusions
- New York has a comprehensive statewide data
collection system due to - the seriousness of the statewide pediatric HIV
epidemic - the need to monitor regulatory compliance
- Less comprehensive systems, e.g. reports from
sentinel hospitals, special studies, etc. can
also yield useful data