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. 2023 Dec 28;14(1):72.
doi: 10.3390/diagnostics14010072.

" It Soothes Your Heart": A Multimethod Study Exploring Acceptability of Point-of-Care Viral Load Testing among Ugandan Pregnant and Postpartum Women Living with HIV

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" It Soothes Your Heart": A Multimethod Study Exploring Acceptability of Point-of-Care Viral Load Testing among Ugandan Pregnant and Postpartum Women Living with HIV

Agnes Nakyanzi et al. Diagnostics (Basel). .

Abstract

Background: High adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) is critical for achieving viral suppression and preventing onward HIV transmission. ART continuation can be challenging for pregnant women living with HIV (PWLHIV), which has critical implications for risk of vertical HIV transmission. Point-of-care viral load (POC VL) testing has been associated with improved treatment and retention outcomes. We sought to explore acceptability of POC VL testing among Ugandan PWLHIV during pregnancy and postpartum.

Methods: This multimethod analysis drew on quantitative and qualitative data collected between February and December 2021. Quantitatively, we used an intent-to-treat analysis to assess whether randomization to clinic-based POC VL testing during pregnancy and infant testing at delivery was associated with improved viral suppression (≤50 copies/mL) by 3 months postpartum compared to standard-of-care (SOC) VL testing through a central laboratory, adjusting for factorial randomization for the male partner testing strategy. Additionally, a subset of 22 PWLHIV in the POC VL arm participated in in-depth qualitative interviews. We inductively analyzed transcripts to develop categories representing concepts that characterized women's perceptions of POC VL testing during pregnancy and at delivery and ways that POC VL testing may have impacted their ART adherence and viral suppression. Key themes around women's perceptions of POC VL testing were then organized into main categories.

Results: Overall, 151 PWLHIV were enrolled into the study, 77 (51%) of whom were randomized to receive POC VL testing during pregnancy and at delivery. Women reported in qualitative interviews that POC VL testing had (1) motivated their ART adherence during pregnancy and postpartum and that they felt this testing method had (2) helped them protect their infants from acquiring HIV and (3) improved their emotional wellbeing.

Conclusions: POC VL testing was highly acceptable among Ugandan PWLHIV and was viewed as an important tool that women believed improved their ART adherence, gave them information necessary to protect their infants from vertical HIV acquisition, and improved their emotional wellbeing. These findings support the global scale-up of POC VL testing in settings with high HIV burden, especially for PWLHIV who may be at risk of treatment disruptions or loss to follow-up.

Keywords: ART adherence; PMTCT; POC VL; point-of-care viral load testing; viral load.

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Conflict of interest statement

Connie L. Celum has served as a scientific advisor to Gilead Sciences and Merck. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Cepheid Inc. donated the GeneXpert® IV instrument and Xpert HIV-1 viral load test kits.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Flowchart of study design and procedures by randomization arm. Legend abbreviations: PWLHIV = pregnant women living with HIV; POC VL = point-of-care viral load; SOC VL = standard-of-care viral load; PCR for EID = polymerase chain reaction for early infant diagnosis; VL-based counseling = viral-load-based counseling. * Visits that involved blood sample collection for viral load testing.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Summary of main categories, accompanied by illustrative quotes.

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