IAS 2015: Implant and Injectable Hormonal Contraception Most Effective Methods for Women with HIV
- Details
- Category: Pregnancy & HIV MTCT
- Published on Tuesday, 11 August 2015 00:00
- Written by Carole Leach-Lemens

Hormonal contraceptive methods are highly effective in reducing the risk of pregnancy in women living with HIV whether on antiretroviral therapy (ART) or not, according to an evaluation involving over 5000 women, according to a report at the 8th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Vancouver last month.
[Produced in collaboration with Aidsmap.com]
Contrary to limited evidence suggesting ART may reduce the effectiveness of hormonal contraceptive methods, notably implants, the data showed implants to be highly effective compared to no contraception and more effective than injectables or oral contraceptive pills, said presenter Maria Pyra from the University of Washington in Seattle.
Use of implants reduced the risk of pregnancy by more than 90% among women on ART as well as women not on ART (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.06 and 0.05, respectively). Pregnancy incidence rates among women not using contraception were 13.2 and 22.5 per 100 women-years for those on and not on ART, respectively.
Pyra stressed the public health imperative of ensuring that women living with HIV who may wish to avoid or postpone pregnancy have access to safe and reliable contraception.
The potential for some hormonal contraceptive methods and some antiretrovirals to interact with each other may hypothetically result in diminished efficacy of either medication or increased side effects and toxicity.
Any possible decrease in the effectiveness of hormonal contraceptive methods may increase the risk of unintended pregnancy and possible associated negative health outcomes. A decrease in ART efficacy could increase the risk of treatment failure, viral resistance, and transmission to sexual partners and infants, while an increase in side effects would affect the health and quality of life of the woman living with HIV, and possibly her treatment adherence.
A limited number of studies have suggested that certain antiretrovirals including protease inhibitors, the non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) nevirapine (Viramune) and efavirenz (Sustiva or Stocrin), and cobicistat-boosted elvitegravir (Vitekta) may diminish the effectiveness of combined estrogen/progestin oral, injectable, and implant contraceptives. A recently published retrospective chart review found a higher pregnancy rate among women using implants and efavirenz-based ART compared to women taking a non efavirenz-based ART regimen.
Few data are available regarding the effect of hormonal contraceptive methods on ART efficacy. However, pharmacokinetic data suggest that oral contraceptives, injectables, or implants are unlikely to affect ART toxicity,
Pyra and colleagues combined data from 5153 women living with HIV to calculate incident pregnancy rates among women using different contraceptive methods (implant, injectable, and oral). The women were participants in 3 longitudinal studies (Partners in Prevention HSV/HIV transmission study, Couples Observational Study, and Partners PrEP study) conducted in Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, Zambia, Botswana, and South Africa over an 8-year period. These rates were then compared to rates among women using no contraception. (The 3 studies evaluated the risks of HIV acquisition and transmission among discordant couples, including the effect of hormonal contraceptives; the Couples Observational Study looked at the immune correlates of HIV protection.)
Controlling for confounding factors, the interaction between each contraceptive method and ART use was assessed to determine if ART reduced contraceptive effectiveness.
The women were relatively young with a median age of 29, healthy (over 50% had CD4 T-cell counts greater than 500 cells/mm3), and had not taken ART at enrollment. The median follow-up period was 1.8 years.
Among the more than 50% of women who ever used contraceptives, 9% used implants, 41% used injectables (notably DMPA or Depo-Provera), and 15% took oral contraceptive pills. During the follow-up period, 31% of women ever took ART, of whom 23% took neviripine and 5% took efavirenz. Just under a quarter (24%) of women became pregnant.
Implants were highly effective in reducing the risk of pregnancy among women on or not on ART, with an incidence rate of 1.1 and 1.4 per 100 person-years, respectively.
Shorter-acting methods were effective, but less so than implants. Pregnancy risk was reduced among women using injectables on ART and not on ART by 82% (aHR 0.18) and 80% (aHR 0.20), respectively. Oral contraceptive use reduced the risk of pregnancy among those on ART and not on ART by approximately 60% (aHR 0.37 and 0.36, respectively).
Pyra and colleagues found no statistical evidence that ART use including nevirapine reduced contraceptive effectiveness. When limited to efavirenz, all methods showed reduced effectiveness. However, there was no statistically significant difference when compared to women on no ART.
Pyra concluded that hormonal contraceptives, notably implants and injectables, are effective for women with HIV on ART. She added that data on real-world hormonal contraception effectiveness are important for family planning guidelines for women living with HIV.
8/12/15
Reference
M Pyra, R Heffron, NR Mugo, et al. Effectiveness of contraception for HIV-infected women using antiretroviral therapy combined data from 3 longitudinal studies. 8th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment, and Prevention. Vancouver, July 19-22, 2015. Abstract MOPDB0103.