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Mortality and clinical outcomes in children treated with antiretroviral therapy in four african vertical programs during the first decade of paediatric HIV Care, 2001-2010 | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal
Journal Article
|Research

Mortality and clinical outcomes in children treated with antiretroviral therapy in four african vertical programs during the first decade of paediatric HIV Care, 2001-2010

Ben-Farhat J, Schramm B, Nicolay N, Wanjala S, Szumilin E, Balkan S, Pujades-Rodriguez M
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To assess mortality and clinical outcomes in children treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART) in four African vertical programmes between 2001 and 2010.

METHODS
Cohort analysis of data from HIV-infected children (<15 years old) initiating ART in four sub-Saharan HIV programmes in Kenya, Uganda and Malawi, between December 2001 and December 2010. Rates of mortality, programme attrition and first-line clinico-immunological failure were calculated by age group (<2, 2-4 and 5-14 years), 1 or 2 years after ART initiation, and risk factors were examined.

RESULTS
A total of 3949 children, 22.7% aged <2 years, 32.2% 2-4 years and 45.1% 5-14 years, were included. At ART initiation, 60.8% had clinical stage 3 or 4, and 46.5% severe immunosuppression. Overall mortality, attrition and 1-year failure rates were 5.1, 10.8 and 9.0 per 100 person-years, respectively. Immunosuppression, stage 3 or 4, and underweight were associated with increased rates of mortality, attrition and treatment failure. Adjusted estimates showed lower mortality hazard ratios (HR) among children aged 2-4 years (HR = 0.57, 95% CI 0.42-0.77 than children aged 5-14 years). One-year treatment failure incidence rate ratios (IRR) were similar regardless of age (IRR = 0.91, 95% CI 0.67-1.25 for <2 years; 1.01, 95% CI 0.83-1.23 for 2-4 years, vs. 5-14 years).

CONCLUSIONS
Good treatment outcomes were achieved during the first decade of HIV paediatric care despite the late start of therapy. Encouraging early HIV infant diagnosis in and outside prevention of mother-to-child transmission programmes, and linkage to care services for early ART initiation, is needed to reduce mortality and delay treatment failure.

Countries

Kenya Malawi Uganda

Languages

English
DOI
10.1111/tmi.12830
Published Date
01 Mar 2017
PubMed ID
27992677
Journal
Tropical Medicine and International Health
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages 340-350
Issue Date
2017-01-26
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