A pilot prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) programme was implemented in Constanta County, Romania, between 2000 and 2002. The programme consisted of clinician training, routine antenatal HIV counselling and testing and the care of HIV-infected pregnant women and their infants. A total of 11,423 pregnant women (10,192 (89%) white Europeans, 862 (7.5%) Rroma, 369 (3.2%) Central Asians) were tested during the pilot, at a median of 24 weeks' gestation. Rapid HIV testing at delivery was introduced during the pilot, to supplement the antenatal testing, both of which required informed consent. Overall seroprevalence was 1.75 per 1,000 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.07-2.70 per 1,000). HIV infection was associated with having a high-risk partner, prostitution and non-Caucasian ethnicity. Twelve infected women completed their pregnancies, of whom seven received antenatal antiretroviral therapy (ART); all neonates received prophylactic ART and five were delivered by elective caesarean section. Three infants were HIV-infected, giving a vertical transmission rate of 25% (95% CI 5.49-57.2%); all three were born to mothers not identified as infected until delivery, and who therefore received no antenatal ART. A key challenge for PMTCT in Romania will be the prompt identification of pregnant HIV-infected women, to allow the optimum application of interventions.
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