Associate Provost for Research
Boston University Medical Campus
NICHD - National Institute of Child Health & Human Development Research Resources

Abstract

Grant Number: 5R01HD039611-06
PI Name: THEA, DONALD M.
PI Email: dthea@bu.edu
PI Title: PROFESOR
Project Title: REDUCE POSTNATAL TRANSMISSION OF HIV THROUGH BREASTMILK

Abstract: It is well established that infants breast fed by their HIV-infected mothers are at risk of acquiring HIV infection through breast milk. However, in low resource settings where the HIV epidemic now predominates, breast feeding cannot simply be replace by breast milk substitutes since alternatives to breast milk are unavailable, unaffordable and unsafe. With this application we aim to test the safety and efficacy of short duration exclusive breast feeding to minimize risks of HIV transmission without increasing risks of non-HIV infant mortality. We propose a 5-year study of HIV-positive mothers and their children to be conducted in two urban primary health care clinics in Lusaka, Zambia. All HIV-positive women and their infants will be offered the two-dose nevirapine intervention and will be counseled about the risks and benefits of infants feeding options. Women who indicate their decision to breast feed will be eligible for enrollment into the study. A culturally appropriate, affordable and sustainable breast feeding education and support program to encourage exclusive breast feeding will be developed, and all women who elect to breast feed will be encouraged to exclusively breast feed to 4 months. Half of the women will be randomized to a counseling program which will encourage abrupt weaning to full replacement feeding at 4 months, and half will be randomized to a program to encourage continued breast feeding after 4 months with the usual introduction of weaning foods. Children will be followed for two years with regular medical histories, physical exams and clinical sampling. The primary objective of the study, based on the random assignment, is to compare HIV transmission rates and under-2 year mortality rates in children who abruptly wean at four months of age versus children who are weaned according to local practice. The second primary objective, based on observational comparisons, is to compare HIV transmission among infants whose mothers adhere to recommendations to exclusively breast feed with those who do not. Secondary objectives are to describe acute and chronic effects of abrupt weaning on child morbidity. The study proposes to test an inexpensive and potentially sustainable public health intervention to reduce HIV transmission through breast feeding while preserving benefits of breast feeding for other aspects of child health in a very low resource settings.

Thesaurus Terms:
AIDS education /prevention, HIV infection, breast feeding, infant human (0-1 year), newborn human (0-6 weeks), pediatric AIDS, preschool child (1-5), vertical transmission
diarrhea, human milk, lung disorder, mother /infant health care, nevirapine
African, clinical research, female, human subject, women's health

Institution: BOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
715 ALBANY ST, 560
BOSTON, MA 021182394
Fiscal Year: 2004
Department: HEALTH POLICY AND MANAGEMENT
Project Start: 15-AUG-2000
Project End: 29-SEP-2005
ICD: NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CHILD HEALTH AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
IRG: ZRG1


Boston, Tue, 23 Jan 2007 17:59:27 EST