To estimate ART adherence rates during pregnancy and postpartum in high-, middle- and low-income countries. MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCI Web of Science, NLM Gateway and Google scholar databases were searched. We included all studies reporting adherence rates as a primary or secondary outcome among HIV-infected pregnant women. Two independent reviewers extracted data on adherence and study characteristics. A random-effects model was used to pool adherence rates; sensitivity, heterogeneity, and publication bias were assessed. Of 72 eligible articles, 51studies involving 20,153 HIV-infected pregnant women were included. Most studies were from United States (n=14, 27%) followed by Kenya (n=6, 12%), South Africa (n=5, 10%), and Zambia (n=5, 10%). The threshold defining good adherence to ART varied across studies (>80%, >90%, >95%, 100%). The pooled proportion of women with adequate adherence levels was higher during the antepartum (75.7%, 95% CI 71.5-79.7%) than during postpartum (53.0%, 95% 32.8% to 72.7%) (p=0.005). Selected reported barriers for non-adherence included physical, economic and emotional stresses, depression (especially post-delivery), alcohol or drug use, and ART dosing frequency or pill burden. Our findings indicate that only 73.5% of pregnant women achieved optimal ART adherence. Reaching adequate ART adherence levels was a challenge in pregnancy, but especially during the postpartum period. Further research to investigate specific barriers and interventions to address them are urgently needed globally.
Human Sciences Research Council (Wed,) studied this question.