ARTIGO ARTICLE

 

Control of mother-to-child transmission of infectious diseases in Brazil: progress in HIV/AIDS and failure in congenital syphilis

 

Controle da transmissão vertical de doenças infecciosas no Brasil: avanços na infecção pelo HIV/AIDS e descompasso na sífilis congênita

 

 

Alberto Novaes Ramos Jr.I; Luiza Harunari MatidaII; Valéria SaraceniIII; Maria Amélia de S. M. VerasIV; Ricardo José Soares PontesI

IFaculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Fortaleza, Brasil
IICoordenação Estadual de DST e AIDS de São Paulo, Secretaria Estadual de Saúde, São Paulo, Brasil
IIICoordenação Municipal de DST e AIDS do Rio de Janeiro, Secretaria Municipal de Saúde, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
IVFaculdade de Ciências Médicas, Santa Casa de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brasil

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

In Brazil, syphilis and HIV infection are considered serious public health problems. However, in practice, epidemiological surveillance, prevention measures, and prenatal care seem to be more effective in the control of mother-to-child transmission of the HIV than in the control of transmission of the Treponema pallidum. Here we discuss the differences in surveillance, prenatal care, and care of the newborn. Important differences were identified. It is concluded that there is an urgent need to establish prevention of mother-to-child transmission of syphilis as a public health priority, using an integrated approach including women's health, children's health, primary health care, and STD/AIDS programs on all governmental levels. These issues also need to be discussed with all stakeholders involved. Important aspects related to the problem are the training of public health professionals, as well as the participation of the community. The elimination of congenital syphilis does not require expensive drugs, and diagnostic tools, but a long-term sustainable approach.

Prenatal Care; Vertical Disease Transmission; Congenital Syphilis; HIV; Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome


RESUMO

No Brasil, a infecção pelo Treponema pallidum e pelo vírus da imunodeficiência humana são eventos considerados prioritários. No entanto, apesar das políticas públicas, a resposta em termos das ações de vigilância e prevenção, assistência pré-natal e ao recém-nascido, é diferenciada, parecendo ser mais bem estruturada para a redução da transmissão vertical do HIV do que para a do T. pallidum. No presente artigo, potenciais diferenças são analisadas quanto ao desenvolvimento das ações. Identificou-se que as desigualdades existentes na atenção aos dois problemas apresentam dimensões diferenciadas nas regiões do país. Reconheceu-se a necessária e urgente priorização da sífilis na gravidez, envolvendo áreas técnicas como atenção básica, saúde da mulher, saúde da criança e controle de doenças sexualmente transmissíveis, em todas as esferas de governo. Emerge como questão relevante no encaminhamento do problema a formação de profissionais de saúde e a mobilização da sociedade na perspectiva do controle. É ainda necessário inserir o tema e formas de enfrentamento na agenda de gestão. A eliminação da sífilis congênita requer insumos de baixo custo, bem como ações sustentáveis em longo prazo.

Cuidado Pré-Natal; Transmissão Vertical de Doença; Sífilis Congênita; HIV; Síndrome de Imunodeficiência Adquirida


 

 

Introduction

In Brazil, the successive transformations in the epidemiological profile are different character from those observed in the industrialized countries 1, where chronic-degenerative diseases are progressively replacing infectious and parasitic diseases are being progressively substituted for chronic-degenerative diseases, even though most industrialized countries have been facing the emergence and re-emergence of infectious diseases 2,3. In reality, the Brazilian epidemiological context is characterized by a morbidity/mortality subsequent to the inequality resulting from a "protracted epidemiological transition" 4.

A look at the five huge Brazilian regions shows an epidemiological situation in which important contrasts 5 are determined by a historic process of "geographic polarization", side by side with social contrasts, manifesting themselves through marked differences in the levels of morbidity/mortality indicators among different population strata 1.

The study of the epidemiological situation of the infection by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and of the infection by the Treponema pallidum, permits the observation, and contrast, of conditions typical to both groups of diseases, respectively, called "emerging" 6,7, and "persistent" 8. The HIV was identified in 1983 9, and the first therapeutic intervention, Zidovudine (AZT), was approved for human use in 1987 10. Its utilization in the prophylaxis of vertical HIV transmission has had the greatest epidemiological impact so far observed in the prevention of new cases of this infection 11. On the other hand, the T. pallidum was discovered in 1905 by Schaudinn & Hoffmann 12, and the antimicrobial activity of penicillin was established in 1928, with proven antibacterial effects in human beings in 1941 13.

Syphilis and the HIV infection can be transmitted from mother to child, under different probabilities: approximately 25% in the case of HIV 11, and, in the case of syphilis, from 70% to 100%, in the primary and secondary phases, falling to approximately 30% in the later phases of maternal infection (latent and tertiary) 14. The reduction of mother-to-child HIV transmission and the elimination of congenital syphilis can be achieved if they are prevented and /or diagnosed and treated during the prenatal period.11,14. In the case of the HIV there is also exists the possibility of preventing HIV transmission during delivery or after birth, but this is not possible with syphilis. The rate of mother-to-child HIV transmission can be reduced to levels of less than 2% 15. Congenital syphilis can now be eliminated entirely if the mother is diagnosed and treated during the prenatal period 14,16,17.

In spite of the real possibility of attaining high control levels, the reduction of mother-to-child transmission of these diseases has not occurred in an equitable manner among countries, nor even among different regions of the same country 7,18,19. Even though screening and treatment interventions have been recommended for the entire population of infected expecting mothers and their babies, there is still low coverage and quality of actions. Difficulties of the healthcare network in assisting, counseling, and making laboratory diagnoses of the infections reflect this situation. Insufficient prenatal screening coverage of women, mainly in the most vulnerable populations, and the varying quality of prenatal care, still less than desirable, result in unequal and precarious healthcare utilization in many regions 16,19.

Therefore, mother-to-child HIV and syphilis transmission continue to be major public health challenges, demanding consistent strategies that incorporate, not only data relative to this complex infectious process, but also the behavior of the population.20,21,22. Meanwhile, analyse have shown that mother-to-child syphilis transmission in Brazil currently represents a worse health threat than that of the mother-to-child HIV infection.

From this perspective, the object of this paper is to establish an epidemiological scenario for the mother-to-child HIV and T. pallidum in Brazil, through a comparative analysis of actions in the context of epidemiological surveillance, control, prevention, and care, of these two infectious processes.

 

Methods

The analysis of the epidemiological scenario in Brazil was based on a review of the scientific literature and official documents about on the subject, published by the Ministry of Health, and, in particular, the Brazilian National STD/AIDS Program (PNDST/AIDS). These include, mainly, the analysis of data from the Reportable Diseases Database (SINAN), specifically for syphilis, data available in national epidemiological bulletins, as well as the results of sentinel studies of HIV and T. pallidum infection among pregnant women, financed by the Ministry of Health.

By constructing an epidemiological profile of the morbidity/mortality for the different Brazilian regions, an attempt was made to establish a relationship between a set of strategies aiming to curb the spread of such infections and the epidemiological surveillance of HIV and T. pallidum among mothers and children. In this way, published official guidelines, bulletins, and reports that document the national response to vertical transmission of these diseases were identified.

 

Mother-to-child T. pallidum transmission scenario in Brazil

There are still high levels of syphilis in Brazil, even in the 21st century. This is in spite beginning of actions to reduce the mother-to-child T. pallidum transmission before those for HIV, and Brazil having participated in the "Project for the Elimination of Congenital Syphilis in the Americas", in 1995 23, and agreeing to an elimination goal (it still has not been achieved). Based on data from reported cases, the incidence rate in the country had varied from 0.09 cases per thousand live births in 1998 to 1.6 cases per thousand live births in 2004. 24.

Even though reporting has been compulsory since 1986, only 29,396 cases of congenital syphilis were reported to the Ministry of Health between January 1998 and June 2005 24. Taking as a reference the estimates of a national sentinel study of expectant mothers in 2004, substantial under-reporting. This study was carried out in a representative sample of pregnant women between 15 and 49 years of age from all regions of the country (almost 20,000 women) and indicated a 1.6% average incidence for syphilis, with approximately 50,000 pregnant women infected with the disease and an estimated 12,000 live born babies with congenital syphilis per year (using an estimated rate for mother-to-child transmission of 25%) 24. Based on these national data, the average under-reporting to SINAN is estimated to be of 67% a year. Therefore, the number of reported congenital syphilis cases that is used to generate the incidence rates used by the PNDST/AIDS is much lower than expected.

Corroborating these data, in a study carried out in the municipality of Rio de Janeiro, that started with a campaign to eliminate congenital syphilis and was waged between 1999 and 2000, the under-reporting of congenital syphilis to SINAN was found to be between 60% and 70%. 25.

On the other hand, the recording of syphilis during pregnancy was only required in 2005, although previous experiences had demonstrated its importance, and the possibility of leveraging prenatal control actions to reduce mother-to-child transmission. It was defined that, for purposes of epidemiological surveillance, all pregnant women that presented with clinical symptoms of syphilis and/or with a positive serological result for a non-treponemic test, of any title, even in the absence of treponemic test results, carried out during prenatal care, during delivery or curettage, should be reported 24.

The inclusion of syphilis as a compulsory, reportable sexually transmitted disease (STD) was justified, not only because of its elevated incidence rate, mainly among young adults, with a consequent high rate of mother-to-child transmission, but also because of the existence of effective control actions, low-cost diagnosis, and treatment. Another rationale was the high mortality associated with congenital syphilis, and the international commitment of the country for the elimination of this disease 23.

The incidence rates in Brazilian regions, revealed by the sentinel study carried out in 2004 were: 1.9% in the Northeast, 1.8% in the North, 1.6% in the Southeast, 1.4% in the South, and 1.3% in the Central-West 24, translating the regional inequalities in the country. Other studies that analyzed the specific situation of the Southern and Southeastern Regions (in the cities of Porto Alegre – Rio Grande do Sul State –, and Rio de Janeiro) showed that the maternal profile related to congenital syphilis cases in both cities was very similar, affecting women with poor socio-economic conditions, socially excluded, younger, and with a low educational level 25,26. This situation exposed existing inequalities, even within cities, and demonstrated that poverty is the common denominator that determines congenital syphilis 27.

In a research carried out in 1999 and 2000, as part of a national sentinel study of pregnant women, the syphilis incidence rate was that of 1.7%. The major identified risk factors identified for syphilis were: family income of less than one minimum wage, first sexual intercourse with less than 17 years of age, age under 14 during first pregnancy, background of syphilis or other STD during previous pregnancy, treatment for syphilis during current pregnancy, realization of VDRL (venereal disease research laboratory) testing of partner, positive anti-HIV test or test not carried out, previous premature birth, and stillborn birth as a result of pregnancy. Only 43% of the women in puerperium had six or more prenatal consultations, and only 3% had a VDRL in the first and third trimester of gestation 28.

For the latter study it was evident that, aside from the social determinants, operational factors of the health service network of the Brazilian Unified National Health System (SUS) necessarily need to be considered. The analysis of the data from SINAN equally gave evidence of these factors: among congenital cases of syphilis reported in 2004, 78.8% of the mothers had a prenatal, 57% of these had syphilis diagnosed during pregnancy, but only 14.1% had their partners treated. Even without considering the percentage of unknown information, these indicators reflect, in operational terms, low prenatal quality in the country and/or fragility of diagnostic and treatment actions for syphilis, principally during pregnancy 24.

On the other hand, syphilis mortality also is an important indicator for analysis. In Brazil, between 1991 and 1999, the congenital syphilis mortality rates in infants less than a year old remained stable at four deaths per 100,000 19,23. Starting in 1999, a declining trend observed, dropping to 1.7 deaths per 1000,000 live births in 2004 24. In spite of a supposed improvement in care, factors such as under-reporting of cases and deaths could be masking the true values of this indicator.

From the point of view of healthcare providers, better approaches to prenatal diagnosis and care are the keys to responding to these problems. However, some situations, such as dealing with sexual partners, interpreting VDRL results, and the use of penicillin in the basic health-care network, have become, paradoxically, big challenges. In the case of penicillin, many locations in Brazil are not dispensing it, citing adverse side effects, principally anaphylaxis 29.

To organize a structured response, a series of legal documents were defined for reorganizing the SUS network to improve the diagnosis and treatment of syphilis, with an emphasis on pregnant women 30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37. Among the questions covered were: humanizing prenatal care, the financing of complementary diagnostic methods for syphilis, obligatory use of VDRL in maternity wards, and the use of penicillin in the SUS network.

 

Mother-to-child HIV transmission scenario in Brazil

In developed countries, the implementation of interventions to reduce this form of HIV transmission, mainly the administration of antiretrovirals, elective caesarean section, and replacing of breastfeeding, have resulted in substantial reductions in the incidence of AIDS in children 38.

In 2005, the AIDS epidemic in Brazil had more than 371,000 cases of the disease confirmed, and an estimate of around 600,000 HIV infected individuals 39. Of the total confirmed cases, 118,520 (32%) were in women. Between 1993 and 2004, the incidence rate per 100,000 inhabitants grew 2.7 times (from 5 to 12.5) among women, compared to 1.1 times among men (from 17.7 to 20.7) 24. This increase in cases among women is a consequence of the increase of AIDS cases in men through heterosexual transmission. Since the beginning of the epidemic, sexual transmission has been responsible for 75% of AIDS cases in women, reaching 95% in 2004 24.

As a result, the spread of the epidemic in the female population has led to an increase of AIDS cases in children, who acquire it through mother-to-child HIV transmission. In the case of children of both genders under five years old, a continuous decline in the number of reported cases has been observed since 1998. The decline probably reflects preventative actions and control of mother-to-child HIV transmission, which started to be effectively implemented in the second half of the 1990s 17,24,40.

Since 2000, the reporting of pregnant women and children infected with/exposed to the HIV has been mandatory. Nevertheless, considering the poor quality of the data available from SINAN, an analysis of the situation in the country, such as, for example, a clear definition of the infection status in HIV exposed children, is not possible. This has meant that none of the Boletim Epidemiológico do SUS have been able to carry out an analysis of this database on a national level.

In the State of São Paulo, Brazil, for example, the epidemiological surveillance data indicate that in 2004 only 77.8% of the expected HIV cases in pregnant women were reported. The distribution of this coverage by region, nevertheless, presents an important variation (between19% and 100%). In addition, the prenatal use of antiretrovirals by pregnant women occurred in 69% of the cases, but in 15.8% of them this information was not made available to SINAN (Secretaria de Estado da Saúde de São Paulo. Boletim Epidemiológico do Centro de Referência e Treinamento em DST/AIDS 2005; Ano VI; nº. 1). This situation demands changes in the epidemiological surveillance process on a national level for HIV-infected pregnant women and exposed children.

As a form of subsidizing national response, a surveillance study among pregnant women, carried out in 2000, demonstrated an HIV infection incidence rate of 0.47% in pregnant women 40. Starting with these data, utilizing the birth rate for the population of fertile women, and multiplying it by the rates encountered 39, yielded an estimated of 16,566 HIV infected women was reached. In a 2004 sentinel study, once again in a representative sample of pregnant women between 15 and 49 years of age, from all regions of the country, the HIV infection incidence rate was 0.42% at the moment of birth, which corresponded to an estimated 12,644 pregnant women infected 41. It must be emphasized that these numbers are always lower than those encountered for syphilis.

Regarding mother-to-child HIV transmission, the first specific study published in the country showed a rate of 16% in four municipalities in the state of São Paulo 42. Another study, carried out by the Sociedade Brasileira de Pediatria [Brazilian Pediatrics Society] in 2002 revealed a mother-to-child transmission rate of 3.7% for the country as a whole 43. Based on the results of these studies it is possible to confirm an important reduction in vertical HIV transmission over the years. Even so, following the time tendency of mother-to-child HIV/AIDS transmission incidence rates, in spite of an important reduction after the introduction of antiretroviral therapy, there is still a faster spread in some areas, especially in the Northern and Northeastern Regions 24.

Other sources of national data have also been utilized. In regard to prenatal care, the data available from the National System of Prenatal Information (SISPRENATAL), introduced in 2001 as part of the Program for the Humanization of Labor and Childbirth, to monitor care for women and the newly born from the first prenatal to puerperal consultation, documents more HIV tests than VDRL tests being performed in the country, 40% vs. 9%. This situation shows that the quality of prenatal care is unequal among the different Brazilian Regions, especially in the North, Northeast, and Central-West 5.

Even though the Brazilian healthcare network has made available all the necessary inputs for the reduction of mother-to-child transmission at public healthcare providers (anti-HIV test, antiretroviral medication, lactation inhibitor, and infant formula), a study carried out in 2003 shows that only 52% of pregnant Brazilians received effective prenatal coverage. This percentage varies from 24% among women in the Northeast, to 71% among women in the South. In addition, considering the educational level, percentages vary from 19%, among illiterate women, to 64% among those that have at least full basic education. When the analysis only takes into account those pregnant women who have fulfilled all the Ministry of Health recommendations for HIV detection during pregnancy (first prenatal exam during the first trimester, six or more prenatal exams, request for anti-HIV test and results before delivery), the countrywide proportion does not exceed 27%, varying from 10% in the Northeast, to 41% in the South. It must be pointed out that only 6% of illiterate women completed all the recommended stages of the process 44.

In 2003, considering care at the moment of delivery as being strategic, the Birthing Project-Maternity Hospitals was created, aimed at reducing by 50% the mother-to-child HIV transmission rate, from 16% to 8%, among those mothers identified with a rapid test at the moment of delivery, and from 16% to less than 3% among those mothers that had had appropriate prenatal diagnosis and treatment. The proposal envisaged recovering opportunities lost during prenatal care, not only in terms of controlling congenital syphilis, but also HIV infection in exposed infants, as more than 90% of deliveries that occurred in a hospital environment. The program was implemented in SUS maternities, located in municipalities considered to be a priority, according to epidemiological criteria 44. Meanwhile, the evaluation of this project revealed important problems in its application 24.

Similarly to what has been done in respect to T. pallidum infection, legal documents were issued aimed at the reorganization of clinical care and management and the use of antiretroviral therapy, emphasizing HIV-infected pregnant women and the strategies for reducing mother-to-child transmission 30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37.

 

Discussion

The fact that there are such important differences among the responses to these two diseases in Brazil is paradoxical. In reality, the attempt to of mobilize for congenital syphilis control has not generated the same response as it happened to HIV/AIDS. In spite of campaigns to encourage the population to use condoms, these efforts further reinforce attention on AIDS, thus contributing to less attention being given to the dangers of syphilis and other STD.

Even with under-reporting, and the fact that patients, for unknown reasons, do not have access to treatment, the number of AIDS cases in children due to mother-to-child exposure has been progressively decreasing in Brazil, while at the same time congenital syphilis has been presenting a different behavior, maintaining its prevalence, and, in some regions, significantly increasing.

Important steps are upgrading the programs and perfecting epidemiological surveillance, whose objects are early detection during the course of gestation, and the implementation of measures that avert the transmission of both T. pallidum, in the case of syphilis, and HIV, in the case of AIDS, thus avoiding the appearance of new cases.

More specifically, to reach these objectives it is necessary to: (1) carry out early diagnoses of HIV and syphilis infections, facilitating the prompt institution of treatment for the women and their partners, which aids the short, medium, and long term prognosis of the disease, aside from the interrupting the various forms of transmission, with the adoption of preventative measures; (2) diagnoses of HIV and T. pallidum infections, starting by giving the woman the opportunity to be counseled, followed up by a multi-professional team, so that they will be able to understand their actual situation, encouraging compliance to approved measures; (3) begin prophylaxis protocols for mother-to-child HIV and syphilis transmission as early as possible, thus guaranteeing the best outcome for the babies.

It must again be re-emphasized that public healthcare services should make available all necessary inputs for prophylaxis of mother-to-child transmission available. As the diagnosis is made, in most cases, during prenatal exams, the difference in implementation of programs will be reflected in the effectiveness of actions, due to the infra-structure in terms of follow-up and access to healthcare services.

After the serologic diagnostics, offered in an unequal manner for the two diseases, with the anti-HIV testing linked to counseling, female carriers of HIV are almost always referred to more sophisticated healthcare services, where they are submitted to protocols that have been well established by the PNDST/AIDS 45. Women diagnosed with syphilis, in general, have their follow-up at basic healthcare services, and in spite of the existence of concrete recommendations for the treatment of this disease during pregnancy 46,47, cases of congenital syphilis remain at levels which are far from any goal for eliminating congenital syphilis in the foreseeable future. Therefore, a strengthening resolution in basic healthcare is needed, considering that the presence/absence of congenital syphilis is an important indicator for the management of the healthcare service network 47.

Another question is the fact that antiretrovirals are administered orally, which implies in an educational effort to guarantee the necessary compliance among the women over the whole gestational period. Syphilis is still treated with benzathine penicillin, the only medication proven to be effective in treating both mother and fetus 46,47,48, and which should be administered throughout the whole SUS network. Moderate allergic reactions to penicillin are rare (0.5 to 1 case per thousand treatments) 49, transformed into an eventual risk of death for one in 100,000 people who receive the medication 29,50. In this situation, the quality of the health professional is of overwhelming importance.

Another difference, however, resides in the possibility of late intervention, even at the moment of delivery, to avoid mother-to-child HIV transmission. If the pregnant woman is identified at the moment of delivery, or even post-delivery, as an HIV-infected woman, there is still time to administer prophylaxis with injected AZT and withhold breastfeeding, which impedes around 75% of vertically transmitted cases 11,15.

In the case of syphilis, a diagnosis during labor or in the puerperium does not prevent congenital syphilis, and so the newborn will have to undergo a ten day treatment with procaine or crystalline penicillin, depending on the severity of the infection 47,48. In addition, syphilis untreated during gestation results in a fetal, and early neonatal, death rate of approximately 40% 47,51,52, further aggravating the epidemiological situation of syphilis in the country, aside from being a tragedy for the families affected.

To sum up, vulnerability contexts, based on different susceptible populations, and low socio-economic levels, are aspects that should be viewed together in an operational context for the healthcare services network to develop actions against both syphilis and HIV infections.

 

Conclusions

At the beginning of the 21st century there are still many children suffering from congenital syphilis, not only in Brazil, but in other parts of the world 17,18, despite the positive and effective confrontation of mother-to-child HIV transmission 53,54,55.

Although strategies for eliminating mother-to-child HIV transmission and congenital syphilis are being focused on the prenatal care period, it is evident that their implementation is diferent in the different regions of Brazil.

For this needed response, the construction of integral management and care is considered fundamental, not only in the dimension of healthcare by professionals, but also in the organization of healthcare services and the structuring of public policies 56. Questions such as the proper training of health professionals, the re-orientation of control actions of the public healthcare network in the benchmark of health surveillance, and in the application of the legal instruments being prepared, mainly in the past five years, have become a challenge.

Therefore, in the face of epidemiologically expressed inequality in these two conditions, the priority to focus on syphilis in pregnant women, along with mobilization of the entire society, has become necessary and urgency. The emphasis on congenital syphilis as being a sentinel event in public health must be re-enforced 47. In regard to HIV infection, forces should be maintained and perfected, with the purpose of achieving reduced transmission levels that are comparable to those of the developed nations 45,53.

 

Contributors

A. N. Ramos Jr. and L. H. Matida were responsible for creating the proposal, reviewing the literature, and writing and editing the article. V. Saraceni, M. A. S. M. Veras and R. J. S. Pontes participated in the literature review and writing and editing the article.

 

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Correspondence
A. N. Ramos Jr.
Departamento de Saúde Comunitária
Faculdade de Medicina
Universidade Federal do Ceará.
Rua Professor Costa Mendes 1608, 5º andar
Fortaleza, CE 60430-140, Brasil
novaes@ufc.br

Submitted on 21/Jul/2006
Final version resubmitted on 01/Nov/2006
Approved on 13/Nov/2006

Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública Sergio Arouca, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: cadernos@ensp.fiocruz.br