Socio-ecological Determinants of Detectable Viremia among Pregnant People Living with HIV in South Brazil: The Role of Stimulant Use Disorder and Homelessness
Christopher Justin Hernandez, Fernando Echegaray, Kavya Sundar, Lanbo Z. Yang, Mary Catherine Cambou, Eddy R. Segura, Marineide Gonçalves de Melo, Breno Riegel Santos, Ivana Rosângela dos Santos Varella, Karin Nielsen-Saines

TL;DR
This study explores how factors like stimulant use and homelessness affect HIV viremia in pregnant people in Brazil, highlighting the need for targeted interventions.
Contribution
The study identifies stimulant use disorder and homelessness as significant predictors of detectable HIV viremia in pregnant individuals.
Findings
Homelessness was strongly associated with detectable viremia (aRR = 4.02).
Stimulant use disorder significantly increased the risk of detectable viremia (aRR = 3.30).
Prenatal care was linked to lower odds of detectable viremia (aRR = 0.20).
Abstract
Pregnant patients living with HIV are a priority group for the recruitment into the HIV healthcare cascade to prevent adverse maternal and neonatal health outcomes. Understanding the structural, interpersonal, and individual factors that are associated with detectable HIV viremia is of importance to guide outreach and intervention priorities. This was a retrospective cohort study of pregnant patients living with HIV who delivered from January 1, 2017, to December 31, 2023, at a tertiary-level hospital and referral institution for HIV care in Porto Alegre, Brazil. The socio-ecological model was used to guide hypothesis testing regarding associations with detectable viremia. In total, 549 patients were included, of whom 110 (20%) were found to have detectable viremia. Significant differences between detectable and undetectable viremia included prenatal care, homelessness, having a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Homelessness and Social Issues · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
