6 research outputs found
Current perspectives on paediatric HIV management from the Mexico International Aids Society Conference, 2019
CITATION: Archary, M., Fairlie, L. & Slogrove, A. 2019. Current perspectives on paediatric HIV management from the Mexico International Aids Society Conference, 2019. Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine, 20(1):a1027, doi:10.4102/sajhivmed.v20i1.1027.The original publication is available at https://sajhivmed.org.zaENGLISH ABSTRACT: While acknowledging the great achievements in getting 23 million people living with HIV to
access antiretroviral treatment (ART) globally, there is still more to do in order to close the
HIV treatment gap between the paediatric and adult ART programmes, with only 54% of
children accessing ART compared to 62% of adults. Furthermore, while tremendous global
gains have been made in preventing perinatal and postnatal HIV acquisition, HIV-exposed
and uninfected children are still not achieving early childhood developmental outcomes
comparable to HIV-unexposed children. In this article, we present highlights from two preconference
meetings (11th International Workshop on HIV Pediatrics and 5th Workshop on
Children and Adolescents HIV Exposed and Uninfected) and the International Aids Society
(IAS) meeting held in Mexico in July 2019.Publisher's versio
Antiretroviral postnatal prophylaxis to prevent HIV vertical transmission: present and future strategies
Abstract Introduction Maternal antiretroviral therapy (ART) with viral suppression prior to conception, during pregnancy and throughout the breastfeeding period accompanied by infant postnatal prophylaxis (PNP) forms the foundation of current approaches to preventing vertical HIV transmission. Unfortunately, infants continue to acquire HIV infections, with half of these infections occurring during breastfeeding. A consultative meeting of stakeholders was held to review the current state of PNP globally, including the implementation of WHO PNP guidelines in different settings and identifying the key factors affecting PNP uptake and impact, with an aim to optimize future innovative strategies. Discussion WHO PNP guidelines have been widely implemented with adaptations to the programme context. Some programmes with low rates of antenatal care attendance, maternal HIV testing, maternal ART coverage and viral load testing capacity have opted against riskâstratification and provide an enhanced PNP regimen for all infants exposed to HIV, while other programmes provide infant daily nevirapine antiretroviral (ARV) prophylaxis for an extended duration to cover transmission risk throughout the breastfeeding period. A simplified risk stratification approach may be more relevant for highâperforming vertical transmission prevention programmes, while a simplified nonârisk stratified approach may be more appropriate for subâoptimally performing programmes given implementation challenges. In settings with concentrated epidemics, where the epidemic is often driven by key populations, infants who are found to be exposed to HIV should be considered at high risk for HIV acquisition. All settings could benefit from newer technologies that promote retention during pregnancy and throughout the breastfeeding period. There are several challenges in enhanced and extended PNP implementation, including ARV stockouts, lack of appropriate formulations, lack of guidance on alternative ARV options for prophylaxis, poor adherence, poor documentation, inconsistent infant feeding practices and in inadequate retention throughout the duration of breastfeeding. Conclusions Tailoring PNP strategies to a programmatic context may improve access, adherence, retention and HIVâfree outcomes of infants exposed to HIV. Newer ARV options and technologies that enable simplification of regimens, nonâtoxic potent agents and convenient administration, including longerâacting formulations, should be prioritized to optimize the effect of PNP in the prevention of vertical HIV transmission
Recommended from our members
Malnutrition in HIV-Infected Children Is an Indicator of Severe Disease with an Impaired Response to Antiretroviral Therapy
Abstract This observational study aimed to describe immunopathogenesis and treatment outcomes in children with and without severe acute malnutrition (SAM) and HIV-infection. We studied markers of microbial translocation (16sDNA), intestinal damage (iFABP), monocyte activation (sCD14), T-cell activation (CD38, HLA-DR) and immune exhaustion (PD1) in 32 HIV-infected children with and 41 HIV-infected children without SAM prior to initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and cross-sectionally compared these children to 15 HIV-uninfected children with and 19 HIV-uninfected children without SAM. We then prospectively measured these markers and correlated them to treatment outcomes in the HIV-infected children at 48 weeks following initiation of ART. Plasma levels of 16sDNA, iFABP and sCD14 were measured by quantitative real time PCR, ELISA and Luminex, respectively. T cell phenotype markers were measured by flow cytometry. Multiple regression analysis was performed using generalized linear models (GLMs) and the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) approach for variable selection. Microbial translocation, T cell activation and exhaustion were increased in HIV-uninfected children with SAM compared to HIV-uninfected children without SAM. In HIV-infected children microbial translocation, immune activation, and exhaustion was strongly increased but did not differ by SAM-status. SAM was associated with increased mortality rates early after ART initiation. Malnutrition, age, microbial translocation, monocyte, and CD8 T cell activation were independently associated with decreased rates of CD4% immune recovery after 48 weeks of ART. SAM is associated with increased microbial translocation, immune activation, and immune exhaustion in HIV-uninfected children and with worse prognosis and impaired immune recovery in HIV-infected children on ART