Introduction: Mentor Mothers (MM) provide peer support to pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV (PPWH) and their infants with perinatal HIV exposure (IPE) throughout the cascade of prevention of vertical transmission (PVT) services. MM were implemented in Zambézia Province, Mozambique starting in August 2017. This evaluation aimed to determine the effect of MM on PVT outcomes. Methods: A retrospective interrupted time series analysis was done using routinely collected aggregate data from 85 public health facilities providing HIV services in nine districts of Zambézia. All PPWH (and their IPE) who initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART) from August 2016 through April 2019 were included. Outcomes included the proportion per month per district of: PPWH retained in care 12 months after ART initiation, PPWH with viral suppression and IPE with HIV DNA PCR test positivity by 9 months of age. The effect of MM on outcomes was assessed using logistic regression. Results: The odds of 12-month retention increased 1.5% per month in the pre-MM period, compared to a monthly increase of 7.6% with-MM (35–61% pre-MM, 56–72% with-MM; p < 0.001). The odds of being virally suppressed decreased by 0.9% per month in the pre-MM period, compared to a monthly increase of 3.9% with-MM (49–85% pre-MM, 59–80% with-MM; p < 0.001). The odds of DNA PCR positivity by 9 months of age decreased 8.9% per month in the pre-MM period, compared to a monthly decrease of 0.4% with-MM (0–14% pre-MM, 4–10% with-MM; p < 0.001). The odds of DNA PCR uptake (the proportion of IPE who received DNA PCR testing) by 9 months of age were significantly higher in the with-MM period compared to the pre-MM period (48–100% pre-MM, 87–100% with-MM; p < 0.001). Conclusions: MM services were associated with improved retention in PVT services and higher viral suppression rates among PPWH. While there was ongoing but diminishing improvement in DNA PCR positivity rates among IPE following MM implementation, this might be explained by increased uptake of HIV testing among high-risk IPE who were previously not getting tested. Additional efforts are needed to further optimize PVT outcomes, and MM should be one part of a comprehensive strategy to address this critical need.
This was a retrospective interrupted time series analysis using routinely collected patient data from VUMC/FGH‐supported HF in Zambézia Province, Mozambique. During the study period (August 2016–April 2019), the province was comprised of 18 districts in which there were 230 public HF, and VUMC/FGH supported 112 of these. Each district‐level health system consists of one large central HF/referral centre and smaller peripheral HF. The VUMC/FGH MM program was implemented at HF providing maternal–child health services (including ANC), and the number of MM affiliated with each HF was proportionate to the volume of PPWH served at each HF (Table S1). Unpublished FGH programmatic data indicate that during the study period, 25–53% of pregnant women living with HIV were not receiving ART at time of presentation to ANC, and ≥97% of these women were started on ART under the prevailing ART initiation policies (initially Option B+, then Test and Start) [1, 2, 3, 4]. All PPWH and their IPE were eligible for inclusion if they: (1) enrolled in PVT services at one of 85 VUMC/FGH‐supported HF in nine districts (Table S1); (2) newly initiated ART in ANC during the current pregnancy; and (3) enrolled in care from August 2016 (1‐year pre‐MM implementation in August 2017) to April 2019 (end of evaluation period; however, the MM program continues at all sites). We excluded 27 HF that: (1) did not support maternal–child health services; (2) were supported by mothers2mothers® (M2M)—a similar but independent mentoring program for PPWH that had been implemented at a small proportion of VUMC/FGH‐supported HF (i.e. excluded to ensure comparability across intervention sites); or (3) were not supported by VUMC/FGH during the pre‐MM period (i.e. those HF in the district of Quelimane). An additional 15 HF were excluded from some analyses because of systematic missingness of outcomes data (i.e. non‐random missingness before or after a certain time point), as specified in Table S1. Our primary outcomes were retention of PPWH in PVT services, viral suppression among PPWH and HIV DNA PCR test positivity rates among IPE. Retention among PPWH was defined relative to time from ART initiation in ANC; we determined the proportion of PPWH per month who were still in care at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after ART initiation (see the Supplementary Methods for individual‐level retention definitions). Each month, the number of PPWH who initiated ART 1, 3, 6 and 12 months prior and the number of PPWH who were still in care were recorded in the Open Medical Record System (OpenMRS)™ for each HF. The retention proportions for each district were calculated using the aggregated district‐level numbers. Viral suppression among PPWH was defined as a viral load (HIV RNA PCR) 1. To address these invalid proportions, three approaches were employed for a sensitivity analysis: (1) cap all proportions >1 at a value of 1; (2) randomly replace each of them with a number between 0.9 and 1; and (3) exclude all invalid proportions from analysis. All three approaches yielded similar results, so only the results from the first approach (i.e. capping at 1) are reported. For each outcome, we assessed the effect of MM implementation via interrupted time series analysis using monthly district‐level aggregate data. Specifically, an indicator variable named mm was defined by assigning “no” for the pre‐MM period and “yes” otherwise, and a multivariable logistic regression model focusing on mm, mm_month and district was built to explore the effect of MM implementation adjusted by district. Sensitivity analyses were performed using logistic regression with a quasibinomial link function to account for potential overdispersion and generalized linear mixed‐effect models to account for clustering (see details in Supplementary Methods), and the results were essentially the same as those from the original fixed effect models (Tables S5 and S6). Statistical analyses were conducted using R statistical software 3.6.3 [5]. This data use and evaluation plan was approved by the VUMC Institutional Review Board (#201887), the Institutional Research Ethics Committee for Health of Zambézia Province (#16‐CIBS‐Z‐18) and was reviewed in accordance with the CDC human research protection procedures and was determined to be research, but CDC investigators did not interact with human subjects or have access to identifiable data or specimens for research purposes. Individual informed consent was not required for this evaluation since only routinely collected, de‐identified, aggregate data were used, and a waiver of informed consent was approved under the umbrella program evaluation protocol covering this analysis.