Bulletin of the World Health Organization (Jan 2004)

Reconsidering empirical cotrimoxazole prophylaxis for infants exposed to HIV infection

  • Gill Christopher J.,
  • Sabin Lora L.,
  • Tham Joseph,
  • Hamer Davidson H.

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 82, no. 4
pp. 290 – 298

Abstract

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Infants with HIV infection are vulnerable to Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) during their first year of life. WHO and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS now recommend that all children of HIV-positive mothers receive prophylactic cotrimoxazole against PCP from six weeks of age and continue this therapy until exposure through breast milk ceases and the infant is confirmed to be HIV-negative (rarely before one year of age). Empirical prophylaxis invokes a trade-off between possible benefit to the infant versus the risk of resistance to antibiotics and antimalarials. From a critical analysis of the literature, we offer a conceptual model demonstrating how, under certain circumstances, a policy of mass cotrimoxazole prophylaxis may be counterproductive.

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