Title: Paediatric HIV
1Paediatric HIV
- Dr. Russell Pierre
- Senior Lecturer, Consultant Paediatrician
- University of the West Indies
MOH 3rd Annual HIV Clinical Management ARV
Therapy Training Workshop 29-31 March 2006
2Objectives
- At the end of this presentation participants
should be able to - Understand the pathogenesis of HIV in infants and
children - Recognise common presenting features of
paediatric HIV - Understand the strategies for management of
HIV-affected infants and children - Appreciate the application of paediatric HIV/AIDS
management in the Jamaican context
3Philosophy
- Life-cycle / developmental approach to issues of
diagnosis and treatment - Public-health approach to management
- Prevention of HIV
- Prevention of acute illnesses / opportunistic
infections - Preservation of immune function
- Improving quality of life
- Palliative care issues
4Historical perspective
- Paediatric HIV first recognised in 1986 in
Jamaica - Pioneers who initiated individual pockets of
paediatric HIV care - 2002 Development of Pediatric Infectious
Diseases Clinics in Greater Kingston region
coordinated by Prof CDC Christie the
implementation of the Kingston Pediatric
Perinatal Program - Overall Aim Reduce MTCT
- Improve survival QOL of infected children
and adolescents - 2003 Program received a major boost in
therapeutic and laboratory support through
Clinton HIV/AIDS Initiative and Global Fund - 2003-present Established clinics in St. Anns
Bay, Cornwall Regional, Mandeville, and MayPen
Hospitals through outreach and preceptorship
training
5JAMAICA Pediatric AIDS Cases Deaths (1982 -
2004)
Source Ministry of Health, Jamaica
6Historical perspective
- Dramatic fall in incidence of new cases of
paediatric infections in US - Paediatric ARV History
- 1988 monotherapy with AZT
- 1994 dual therapy
- 1998 triple therapy with HAART
7Key differences from infected adults
- Perinatal transmission
- Effect of virus on immature immune system
- Virologic response
- CD4 response reliance on CD4 to determine
severity of immunologic deterioration - Clinical presentation
- Diagnostic challenge in lt 18 months
8Possible routes of transmission
In-utero
At Birth
During breastfeeding
9Other modes of transmission
- Sexual abuse, exploitation, experimentation,
consensual - Transfusion (rare in Ja)
- Intravenous drug use (rare in Ja)
10Natural history of paediatric HIV
- Newborns most studies generally well at birth
- Virologic response increases rapidly in initial
2-3 months then slowly declines to virologic
set-point after several months to years - Immunologic response brisk and variable T cell
proliferation hence cannot rely on absolute CD4
as marker of immune deficiency CD4 percent lt15
indicative of severe immune deficiency
Virologic set-point state of in-vivo equilibrium
between viral production and elimination
11Virologic response
Child Adult
Time (years)
Infection
12Natural history of paediatric HIV
Pattern of Clinical Progression
Asymptomatic
Mild to Moderate
Severe
13Natural history of paediatric HIV
Rapid 20
Intermediate 70
Slow 10
14Rapid Progressors
- PCP
- FTT
- CNS invovlement
- Chronic GE
- Recurrent infections
- CMV infection
- Persistent candidiasis
15Progression to AIDS
- Early onset perinatal infections in infants lt
12 months - Commonest manifestations
- recurrent pneumonia
- recurrent diarrhoea
- growth failure
- neurological abnormalities
-
16Slow Progressors
- Generally well until late childhood
- Some completely asymptomatic
- Few---progress to AIDS
- Main problems pneumonia / Lymphocytic
interstitial pneumonitis (LIP), stunting
17Clinical manifestations
18Generalised, persistent lymphadenopathy
19Dermatitis
20Mucocutaneous Candidiasis
21Recurrent lower respiratory tract infections
- Bacterial pneumonia
- Community acquired infections
- Need to always consider tuberculosis
- Increased occurrence of LRTI associated with LIP
22Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia (PCP)
23Lymphocytic Interstitial Pneumonitis
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26Chronic lung disease
27Wasting / FTT / Malnutrition
28Hepatosplenomegaly
29Neurodevelopmental abnormalities
- Developmental delay
- Developmental regression
- Spasticity, hyperreflexia
- Impaired cognitive function
- CT scan brain generalized cortical atrophy with
ventricular enlargement and calcified basal
ganglia (arrow) - (Ref. D. Carli C et al, Ann Neurol 34(2)
198-205, 1993.)
30Clinical manifestations
- Recurrent or persistent upper respiratory tract
infection, sinusitus or otitis media - Parotitis
- Recurrent diarrhoea
- Bacterial sepsis
- Organ-specific dysfunction
- CDC. 1994 Revised classification system for
human immunodeficiency virus infection in
children less than 13 years of age. MMWR, 1994.
43 (No. RR-12) p. 1-10
31Reducing the impact of HIV on children
32AIM Increase survival Improve quality of life
33 Give a child a chance
- Early Intervention is the key
34Framework for a comprehensive approach to manage
HIV in infants children
Prevent unintended pregnancy in HIV women
Prevent MTCT
Prevent HIV in women
Provide accessible treatment, care and support
for HIV-infected women, their infants and
families
35Key aspects of management
- Prevention of HIV infection
- Early diagnosis
- Early detection high index of suspicion
- Prevention ( timely treatment) of common
childhood illnesses - Prevention and early treatment of opportunistic
infections - HAART preserve / restore immune system
- Palliative care
- Multidisciplinary management approach
36Management of HIV-exposed infant
- ARV prophylaxis (pre- and post-exposure)
- Breastfeeding alternatives
- Follow-up and monitoring
- PCP prophylaxis Cotrimoxazole
- Diagnosis of HIV infection
- Immunizations National EPI recommendations
- Nutrition
- Growth development
- Clinical evaluation for stigmata of HIV infection
- Challenges follow-up, adherence to prophylaxis,
stigma of non-breastfeeding
37Diagnosis of HIV infection in exposed infant
- Serial qualitative DNA PCR is currently the
accepted standard for early diagnosis - DNA-PCR 2 consecutive readings
- 1-2 months
- 3-6 months
- Antibodies (Elisa)
- 12 months in non-breastfed infant
- Others RNA PCR, p24, viral culture
- Passive transfer of maternal Ig G leads to
detectable antibody in uninfected children for up
to 18 months - Antibody tests e.g.ELISA not diagnostic until 18
months unless negative
38 39Diagnosis of HIV infection in child
- HIV Elisa with confirmatory Western blot
- gt 18 months of age
40Classification of paediatric HIV/AIDS
- CDC Clinical Category
- N asymptomatic
- A mildly symptomatic
- B moderately symptomatic
- C severely symptomatic AIDS defining
conditions
CDC 1994 Revised classification system for human
immunodeficiency virus infection in children less
than 13 years of age. MMWR, 1994. 43 (No. RR-12)
p. 1-10
41Classification of paediatric HIV/AIDS
- CDC Immune Category
- CD4, and age-specific CD4 count
- 1 ? 25 none/mild suppression
- 2 15 24 moderate suppression
- 3 lt 15 severe suppression
42Classification of paediatric HIV/AIDS
- WHO Staging System
- Clinical Stage 1 (asymptomatic)
- Clinical Stage 11 (mild to moderate)
- Chronic diarrhoea
- Candidiasis
- FTT
- Persistent fever
- Recurrent severe bacterial infections
- Clinical Stage 111(severely symptomatic)
- AIDS defining conditions
- Severe FTT
- Progressive encephalopathy
- Malignancy
- Recurrent sepsis
43Comprehensive management of HIV-infected child
- Multidisciplinary management approach
- Prevention ( timely treatment) of common
childhood illnesses - Regular ambulatory care
- Growth development monitoring
- Immunizations National EPI guidelines
influenza, pneumococcal - Nutrition food safety
44Comprehensive management of HIV-infected child
- Prevention and early treatment of opportunistic
infections - Cotrimoxazole
- Fluconazole
- Azithromycin
- Aciclovir
- Isoniazid
- IVIG
- Palliative care
45Antiretroviral Therapy
Preserve and restore immune system
46Who, when, what, how???
- Several guidelines Caribbean, Jamaican, WHO,
DHHS.. - Bottom-line issues for consideration
- Feasible
- Accessible
- Affordable
- Safe
- Sustainable
- Practical
47Practical guidelines
- Any HIV-infected infant or child with AIDS
defining condition or severe immunosuppression
(CD4 lt 15) - All HIV-infected infants lt 12 months of age,
regardless of clinical, immunologic or virologic
parameters - All others discuss and consider treatment
according to guidelines
48Practical considerations
- Limited range of paediatric formulations in
Jamaica - Initiation of therapy adherence in children is
caregiver dependent - Treatment options are limited
- Aim for practical, simplified regimes
49Effectiveness of interventions in treating
Paediatric HIV/AIDS
50Collaborators
- Kingston Pediatric Perinatal HIV/AIDS Program
(KPAIDS) Team - University of the West Indies University
Hospital of the West Indies - Jamaica Ministry of Health Bustamante Hospital
for Children, Comprehensive Health Centre,
Spanish Town Hospital, National AIDS Program - Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation
(EGPAF), Pfizer Foundation
51Aim
- To characterize the effectiveness of
interventions in a cohort of HIV-infected
children and adolescents attending Paediatric
Infectious Diseases Clinics in Greater Kingston,
Jamaica
52Objectives
- Describe the demographic and clinical
immunological profile of the cohort - Determine enrollment pattern and uptake of
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) - Characterize outcomes related to
hospitalisations, bacterial and opportunistic
infections, growth, morbidity and mortality
53Methods
- Longitudinal observational cohort study
- Paediatric Infectious Diseases Clinics at UHWI,
BHC, CHC STH - HIV-infected infants and children consecutively
enrolled in KPAIDS Program - Period 1 Sept. 2002 to 31 Aug. 2005
- HIV status confirmed by HIV DNA pcr, Elisa/WB
where appropriate
54Methods
- Training of healthcare personnel
- Development of unified protocols for clinical
management - Primarily ambulatory surveillance also
in-patient consultations, case management - Data tracking and audit morbidity, mortality,
hospitalisations, laboratory markers
(haematology, biochemistry, cultures, immunology,
flow cytometry, viral load) - Dbase management analysis-Excel, Access, SPSS,
EpiInfo where indicated
55Comprehensive Interventions
- Integrated multidisciplinary approach to
ambulatory treatment care - Increased access to care
- Inpatient consultations
- Immunisation, nutrition, growth/development
surveillance - MOH Jamaica guidelines
- Prophylaxis Opportunistic Infections bactrim,
fluconazole, azithromycin, isoniazid,
clotrimazole beclomethasone/ salbutamol MDI - ARV counselling, treatment, adherence and AE
monitoring - High index of suspicion for TB
56Results
57Enrollment Profile
58Enrollment Pattern
59Characteristics of Cohort
60Clinical Immunological Profile
61CDC Category Profile
62Median CD4 percentage by year
CD4 percent
0.0
ANOVA F 1.015 p0.318
Year
63ARV Uptake
64ARV Uptake
65ARV Uptake
Ever on ARV
Yes No
38
62
66ARV Uptake
Regime 1
Zidovudine Lamivudine Nevirapine
85
6
6
2
1
67ARV Uptake
- ARV-experienced group
- Regime 2 10.7
- Regime 3 5
- Regime 4 0.8
- Reasons for regime change toxicity/AE (13),
clinical failure (8), financial limitations
(3), optimisation (2) - 80 (ARV-naïve) currently on initial regime
68Adherence levels for children on ART
69Factors affecting adherence
- Factors significantly associated with
non-adherence - Older age of child (r0.428,p0.001)
- Missing clinic appointments (r0.340, p0.018)
- Nausea (p0.003)
70Adherence to ART
- Adherence to pediatric ART 87
- Adherence correlated with immune-reconstitution,
measured by CD4 counts/percent - Adherence in institutions better because of
directly observed therapy (DOT) - Main reasons for non-adherence in children on ART
are caregiver-related - Knowledge about ART excellent except development
of resistance - Predictors of non-adherence Older age of child,
missing appointments, nausea
71Growth Outcome
- Weight, height, BMI values standardized to z
scores (CDC 2000 growth chart) - Baseline, 6, 12, 24 months since initiation of
antiretroviral therapy
72Weight for Age
73Weight for Height
74BMI for Age
75Height for Age
76Hospitalisation Profile
- Median 1.0 (Range 0 to 20) hospital admissions
- IQR 0 3 admissions
77Incidence Density
78Deaths
A
79Summary
2002
2005
2003
2004
80Conclusions
- Improved survival of HIV-infected children and
adolescents - Improved their quality of life
81Conclusions
- Developed an ambulatory surveillance model for
Paediatric HIV/AIDS treatment care in a
developing country - Focused on a Public Health Approach
- Integrated with existing resources in Jamaica
- Fostered an excellent collaboration with Jamaica
MOH National HIV/AIDS Program
82Future Directions
83Future Directions
- Reducing MTCT to lt 2
- Strengthening paediatric HIV/AIDS treatment
care capacity in rest of Jamaica - Palliative care issues
- Challenges
- Issue of viral resistance
- Limitations for treatment options
- Maturing cohort of infected adolescents
transition to adult life - Sustainability of treatment and laboratory
monitoring
84Acknowledgements
-
- MOH, National AIDS Program
- All participating and facilitating institutions
- KPAIDS Team
- Children and their caregivers