BMC Research Notes (Oct 2011)

Early Antiretroviral Therapy reduces the incidence of otorrhea in a randomized study of early and deferred antiretroviral therapy: Evidence from the <ul>C</ul>hildren with <ul>H</ul>IV <ul>E</ul>arly Anti<ul>r</ul>etroviral Therapy (CHER) Study

  • Cornell Morna,
  • van Rensburg Anita,
  • Dobbels Els,
  • Rabie Helena,
  • Nachman Sharon,
  • Sorour Gill,
  • Taliep Reghana,
  • Hainline Clotilde,
  • Violari Avy,
  • Madhi Shabir A,
  • Cotton Mark F

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-4-448
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
p. 448

Abstract

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Abstract Background Although otorrhea occurs commonly in HIV-infected infants, there are few data. We compared the incidence of otorrhea in infants receiving early vs deferred ART in the Children with HIV Early Antiretroviral (CHER) trial. Infants aged 6 to 12 weeks of age with confirmed HIV infection and a CD4 percentage greater than or equal to 25% were randomized to early or deferred ART at two sites in South Africa. Medical records from one study site were reviewed for otorrhea. Findings Data were reviewed from the start of the trial in July 2005 until 20 June 2007, when the Data Safety Monitoring Board recommended that randomization to the deferred arm should stop and that all infants in this arm be reviewed for commencing antiretroviral therapy. Infants entered the study at a median of 7.4 weeks of age. Eleven of 38 (29%) on deferred therapy and 7 of 75 (9%) in the early-therapy group developed otorrhea (risk ratio 3.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.31-7.36; p = 0.01). Conclusions Early initiation of antiretroviral therapy is associated with significantly less otorrhea than when a deferred strategy is followed. Trial registration NCT00102960. ClinicalTrials.Gov