학술논문

HIV Encephalopathy in ART-Naïve, Hospitalized Infants in Mozambique.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Journal of Tropical Pediatrics. Dec2021, Vol. 67 Issue 6, p1-10. 10p.
Subject
*AIDS dementia complex
*WEIGHT in infancy
*ANTIRETROVIRAL agents
*SARS-CoV-2
*OCCUPATIONAL therapy
*DEVELOPMENTAL delay
*PHYSICAL therapy
*HIV infection complications
*DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections
*ANTI-HIV agents
*HIV infections
*NEVIRAPINE
*COMMUNICABLE diseases
*PREGNANCY complications
*VERTICAL transmission (Communicable diseases)
Language
ISSN
0142-6338
Abstract
Introduction: The neurodevelopmental impact of HIV infection in older children has been well-described, with characterization of HIV-associated encephalopathy (HIVE) and associated cognitive defects. HIVE is relatively common in older children who were vertically infected. The sparse literature on HIVE in infants suggests that incidence may be up to 10% in the first year of life, but no studies were identified that specifically evaluated hospitalized infants.Methods: A descriptive study of routine inpatient data from two central referral hospitals in Mozambique was conducted. Inclusion criteria were infants with confirmed HIV infection aged <12 months, not on ART, admitted between 1 January 2019 and 30 June 2019. Presumptive HIVE was defined as having delayed developmental milestones in addition to microcephaly and/or pathological reflexes.Results: Seven out of 27 patients (26%) were classified as presumptive HIVE. Delayed milestones were seen in 18 patients (67%) and the prevalence was approximately two times higher in the HIVE (+) group across all milestone categories. Delayed or no maternal ART (p = 0.03) and the infant not having received postnatal nevirapine prophylaxis (p = 0.02) were significantly associated with HIVE.Conclusions: HIVE prevalence is high in ART naïve hospitalized infants, particularly in those with risk factors for in-utero transmission. Thorough neurologic and developmental assessments can help identify HIV-infected infants and can be of particular utility in pediatric wards without access to point-of-care virologic testing where presumptive HIV diagnosis is still needed. Infants with HIVE need comprehensive care that includes antiretroviral therapy and physical/occupational therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]