Complications of use of intrauterine devices among HIV-1-infected women

A WHO expert group and the International Planned Parenthood Federation recommend against use of intrauterine devices (IUDs) in HIV-1-infected women based on theoretical concerns about pelvic infection and increased blood loss. We investigated whether the risk of complications after IUD insertion is...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 1998-04, Vol.351 (9111), p.1238-1241
Hauptverfasser: Sinei, Samuel K, Morrison, Charles S, Sekadde-Kigondu, Christine, Allen, Melissa, Kokonya, Donald
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A WHO expert group and the International Planned Parenthood Federation recommend against use of intrauterine devices (IUDs) in HIV-1-infected women based on theoretical concerns about pelvic infection and increased blood loss. We investigated whether the risk of complications after IUD insertion is higher in HIV-1-infected women than in non-infected women. 649 (156 HIV-1 infected 493 non-infected) women in Nairobi, Kenya, who requested and met local eligibility criteria for insertion of an IUD were enrolled. We gathered information on IUD-related complications, including pelvic inflammatory disease, removals due to infection, pain, or bleeding, expulsions, and pregnancies at 1 and 4 months after insertion. Patients' HIV-1 status was masked from physicians. Complications were identified in 48 of 615 women (11 [7-6%] HIV-1-infected women, 37 [7-9%] non-infected). Incident pelvic inflammatory disease (two [1-4%] HIV-1 infected, one [0-2%] non-infected) and infection-related complications (any tenderness, removal of IUD for infection or pain; ten [6-9%] HIV-1 infected, 27 [5-7%] non-infected) were also rare and similar in the two groups. Complication rates were similar by CD4 (immune) status. Multivariate analyses suggested no association between HIV-1 infection and increased risks for overall complications (odds ratio 0-8 [95% CI 0-4-1·7]) or infection-related complications (1-0 [0-5-2·3]), adjusted for marital status, study site, previous IUD use, ethnic origin, and frequency of sexual intercourse, but a slight increase cannot be ruled out. Our data suggest that IUDs may be a safe contraceptive method for appropriately selected HIV-1-infected women with continuing access to medical services.
ISSN:0140-6736
1474-547X
DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(97)10319-1