Pregnancy and contraceptive use among participants of childbearing potential in the HVTN 705 HIV vaccine trial in Southern Africa
Pamela Mda, Kathryn Mngadi, Bo Zhang, Randy Burnham, Michal Juraska, Ollivier Hyrien, Nigel Garrett, Thozama Dubula, Sinalo Toni, Sibi Joseph, Phillip Kotze, Susan Buchbinder, Azwidihwi Takalani, Frank Tomaka, Alexander Luedtke, Wouter Willems, Edith Swann, Julia Hutter

TL;DR
This study analyzed contraceptive use and pregnancy rates among young women in an HIV vaccine trial in Southern Africa.
Contribution
The study provides insights into factors influencing pregnancy incidence in HIV vaccine trials.
Findings
Pregnancy incidence was higher among younger participants.
Injectable contraceptives were the most commonly used method at enrollment.
Implants were most effective at reducing pregnancy risk compared to other methods.
Abstract
HIV vaccine trial participants include sexually active cisgender females who agree to avoid pregnancy during the active vaccination period. Nevertheless, some pregnancies occur in almost all studies. We examined contraceptive use, pregnancy incidence, and the relationship between pregnancy and HIV seroconversion in one HIV vaccine trial. We performed an exploratory analysis of data collected for HVTN 705/HPX2008, a phase IIb HIV vaccine trial enrolling cisgender women across 23 sites in five southern African countries. Baseline characteristics and contraceptive use were assessed among participants who became pregnant and those who did not during the active vaccination phase (months 0–15). Pregnancy incidence rates were calculated for this phase and the duration of follow up (36 months). Cox regression analysis was used to assess factors associated with incident pregnancy. There were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · Global Maternal and Child Health
