High incidence of intended partner pregnancy among men living with HIV in rural Uganda: Implications for safer conception services
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Date
2019-08-15Author
Kaida, Angela
Kabakyenga, Jerome
Bwana, Mwebesa
Bajunirwe, Francis
Muyindike, Winnie
Bennett, Kara
Kembabazi, Annet
Haberer, Jessica E.
Boum, Yap
Martin, Jeffrey N.
Hunt, Peter W.
Bangsberg, David R.
Matthews, Lynn T.
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Background: Many men with HIV express fertility intentions and nearly half have HIV-uninfected sexual partners. We measured partner pregnancy among a cohort of men accessing antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Uganda.
Methods: Self-reported partner pregnancy incidence and bloodwork (CD4, HIV-RNA) were collected quarterly. Interviewer-administered questionnaires assessed men’s sexual and reproductive health annually and repeated at time of reported pregnancy (2011–2015). We measured partner pregnancy incidence overall, by pregnancy intention, and by reported partner HIV-serostatus. We assessed viral suppression (≤400 copies/mL) during the peri-conception period. Cox proportional hazard regression with repeated events identified predictors of partner pregnancy
Results: Among 189 men, baseline median age was 39.9 years [IQR:34.7,47.0], years on ART was 3.9 [IQR:0.0,5.1], and 51% were virally suppressed. Over 530.2 person-years of follow-up, 63 men reported 85 partner pregnancies (incidence=16.0/100 person-years); 45% with HIV-serodifferent partners. By three years of follow-up, 30% of men reported a partner pregnancy, with no difference by partner HIV-serostatus (p=0.75). 69% of pregnancies were intended, 18% wanted but mis-timed, and 8% unwanted. 78% of men were virally suppressed prior to pregnancy report. Men who were younger (aHR:0.94/year;95%CI:0.89–0.99), had incomplete primary education (aHR:2.95;95%CI:1.36–6.40), and reported fertility desires (aHR:2.25;95%CI:1.04–4.85) had higher probability of partner pregnancy.
Conclusion: A high incidence of intended partner pregnancy highlights the need to address men’s reproductive goals within HIV care. Nearly half of pregnancy partners were at-risk for HIV and one-quarter of men were not virally suppressed during peri-conception. Safer conception care provides opportunity to support men’s health and reproductive goals, while preventing HIV transmission to women and infants.
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