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Early treated HIV-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: Results from the ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort in Cameroon
BACKGROUND: Long-term growth in HIV-infected infants treated early in resource-limited settings is poorly documented. Incidence of growth retardation, instantaneous risk of death related to malnutrition and growth parameters evolution during the first five years of life of uninfected and early treat...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Public Library of Science
2019
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6638950/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31318938 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219960 |
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author | Sofeu, Casimir Ledoux Tejiokem, Mathurin Cyrille Penda, Calixte Ida Protopopescu, Camelia Ateba Ndongo, Francis Tetang Ndiang, Suzie Guemkam, Georgette Warszawski, Josiane Faye, Albert Giorgi, Roch |
author_facet | Sofeu, Casimir Ledoux Tejiokem, Mathurin Cyrille Penda, Calixte Ida Protopopescu, Camelia Ateba Ndongo, Francis Tetang Ndiang, Suzie Guemkam, Georgette Warszawski, Josiane Faye, Albert Giorgi, Roch |
author_sort | Sofeu, Casimir Ledoux |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Long-term growth in HIV-infected infants treated early in resource-limited settings is poorly documented. Incidence of growth retardation, instantaneous risk of death related to malnutrition and growth parameters evolution during the first five years of life of uninfected and early treated HIV-infected children were compared and associated factors with growth retardation were identified. METHODS: Weight-for-age (WAZ), weight-for-length (WLZ), and length-for-age (LAZ) Z-scores were calculated. The ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort includes four groups of infants with three enrolled during the first week of life: HIV-infected (HI, n = 69), HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU, n = 205) and HIV-unexposed uninfected (HUU, n = 196). The last group included HIV-infected infants diagnosed before 7 months of age (HIL, n = 141). The multi-state Markov model was used to describe the incidence of growth retardation and identified associated factors. RESULTS: During the first 5 years, 27.5% of children experienced underweight (WAZ<-2), 60.4% stunting (LAZ<-2) and 41.1% wasting (WLZ<-2) at least once. The instantaneous risk of death observed from underweight state (35.3 [14.1–88.2], 84.0 [25.5–276.3], and 6.0 [1.5–24.1] per 1000 person-months for 0–6 months, 6–12 months, and 12–60 months respectively) was higher than from non-underweight state (9.6 [5.7–16.1], 20.1 [10.3–39.4] and 0.3 [0.1–0.9] per 1000 person-months). Compared to HEU, HIL and HI children were most at risk of wasting (adjusted HR (aHR) = 4.3 (95%CI: 1.9–9.8), P<0.001 and aHR = 3.3 (95%CI: 1.4–7.9), P = 0.01 respectively) and stunting for HIL (aHR = 8.4 (95%CI: 2.4–29.7). The risk of underweight was higher in HEU compared to HUU children (aHR = 5.0 (CI: 1.4–10.0), P = 0.001). Others associated factors to growth retardation were chronic pathologies, small size at birth, diarrhea and CD4< 25%. CONCLUSIONS: HIV-infected children remained at high risk of wasting and stunting within the first 5 years period of follow-up. There is a need of identifying suitable nutritional support and best ways to integrate it with cART in pediatric HIV infection global care. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-6638950 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2019 |
publisher | Public Library of Science |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-66389502019-07-25 Early treated HIV-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: Results from the ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort in Cameroon Sofeu, Casimir Ledoux Tejiokem, Mathurin Cyrille Penda, Calixte Ida Protopopescu, Camelia Ateba Ndongo, Francis Tetang Ndiang, Suzie Guemkam, Georgette Warszawski, Josiane Faye, Albert Giorgi, Roch PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Long-term growth in HIV-infected infants treated early in resource-limited settings is poorly documented. Incidence of growth retardation, instantaneous risk of death related to malnutrition and growth parameters evolution during the first five years of life of uninfected and early treated HIV-infected children were compared and associated factors with growth retardation were identified. METHODS: Weight-for-age (WAZ), weight-for-length (WLZ), and length-for-age (LAZ) Z-scores were calculated. The ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort includes four groups of infants with three enrolled during the first week of life: HIV-infected (HI, n = 69), HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU, n = 205) and HIV-unexposed uninfected (HUU, n = 196). The last group included HIV-infected infants diagnosed before 7 months of age (HIL, n = 141). The multi-state Markov model was used to describe the incidence of growth retardation and identified associated factors. RESULTS: During the first 5 years, 27.5% of children experienced underweight (WAZ<-2), 60.4% stunting (LAZ<-2) and 41.1% wasting (WLZ<-2) at least once. The instantaneous risk of death observed from underweight state (35.3 [14.1–88.2], 84.0 [25.5–276.3], and 6.0 [1.5–24.1] per 1000 person-months for 0–6 months, 6–12 months, and 12–60 months respectively) was higher than from non-underweight state (9.6 [5.7–16.1], 20.1 [10.3–39.4] and 0.3 [0.1–0.9] per 1000 person-months). Compared to HEU, HIL and HI children were most at risk of wasting (adjusted HR (aHR) = 4.3 (95%CI: 1.9–9.8), P<0.001 and aHR = 3.3 (95%CI: 1.4–7.9), P = 0.01 respectively) and stunting for HIL (aHR = 8.4 (95%CI: 2.4–29.7). The risk of underweight was higher in HEU compared to HUU children (aHR = 5.0 (CI: 1.4–10.0), P = 0.001). Others associated factors to growth retardation were chronic pathologies, small size at birth, diarrhea and CD4< 25%. CONCLUSIONS: HIV-infected children remained at high risk of wasting and stunting within the first 5 years period of follow-up. There is a need of identifying suitable nutritional support and best ways to integrate it with cART in pediatric HIV infection global care. Public Library of Science 2019-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC6638950/ /pubmed/31318938 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219960 Text en © 2019 Sofeu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Sofeu, Casimir Ledoux Tejiokem, Mathurin Cyrille Penda, Calixte Ida Protopopescu, Camelia Ateba Ndongo, Francis Tetang Ndiang, Suzie Guemkam, Georgette Warszawski, Josiane Faye, Albert Giorgi, Roch Early treated HIV-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: Results from the ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort in Cameroon |
title | Early treated HIV-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: Results from the ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort in Cameroon |
title_full | Early treated HIV-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: Results from the ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort in Cameroon |
title_fullStr | Early treated HIV-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: Results from the ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort in Cameroon |
title_full_unstemmed | Early treated HIV-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: Results from the ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort in Cameroon |
title_short | Early treated HIV-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: Results from the ANRS-PEDIACAM cohort in Cameroon |
title_sort | early treated hiv-infected children remain at risk of growth retardation during the first five years of life: results from the anrs-pediacam cohort in cameroon |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6638950/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31318938 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219960 |
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