PLoS Medicine (Jan 2018)

Long-term trends in mortality and AIDS-defining events after combination ART initiation among children and adolescents with perinatal HIV infection in 17 middle- and high-income countries in Europe and Thailand: A cohort study.

  • European Pregnancy and Paediatric HIV Cohort Collaboration (EPPICC) study group in EuroCoord,
  • Ali Judd,
  • Elizabeth Chappell,
  • Anna Turkova,
  • Sophie Le Coeur,
  • Antoni Noguera-Julian,
  • Tessa Goetghebuer,
  • Katja Doerholt,
  • Luisa Galli,
  • Dasja Pajkrt,
  • Laura Marques,
  • Intira J Collins,
  • Diana M Gibb,
  • Maria Isabel González Tome,
  • Marisa Navarro,
  • Josiane Warszawski,
  • Christoph Königs,
  • Vana Spoulou,
  • Filipa Prata,
  • Elena Chiappini,
  • Lars Naver,
  • Carlo Giaquinto,
  • Claire Thorne,
  • Magdalena Marczynska,
  • Liubov Okhonskaia,
  • Klara Posfay-Barbe,
  • Pradthana Ounchanum,
  • Pornchai Techakunakorn,
  • Galina Kiseleva,
  • Ruslan Malyuta,
  • Alla Volokha,
  • Luminita Ene,
  • Ruth Goodall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002491
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. e1002491

Abstract

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BackgroundPublished estimates of mortality and progression to AIDS as children with HIV approach adulthood are limited. We describe rates and risk factors for death and AIDS-defining events in children and adolescents after initiation of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) in 17 middle- and high-income countries, including some in Western and Central Europe (W&CE), Eastern Europe (Russia and Ukraine), and Thailand.Methods and findingsChildren with perinatal HIV aged 6 months of cART) death and progression to AIDS were assessed. Of 3,526 children included, 32% were from the United Kingdom or Ireland, 30% from elsewhere in W&CE, 18% from Russia or Ukraine, and 20% from Thailand. At cART initiation, median age was 5.2 (IQR 1.4-9.3) years; 35% of children aged 400 c/mL predicted late death. Predictors of early and late progression to AIDS were similar. Study limitations include incomplete recording of US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) disease stage B events and serious adverse events in some countries; events that were distributed over a long time period, and that we lacked power to analyse trends in patterns and causes of death over time.ConclusionsIn our study, 3,526 children and adolescents with perinatal HIV infection initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART) in countries in Europe and Thailand. We observed that over 40% of deaths occurred ≤6 months after cART initiation. Greater early mortality risk in infants, as compared to older children, and in Russia, Ukraine, or Thailand as compared to W&CE, raises concern. Current severe immune suppression, being underweight, and unsuppressed viral load were associated with a higher risk of death at >6 months after initiation of cART.