Title: CONCLUSIONS
1Older and wiser continued improvements in
clinical outcome and highly active antiretroviral
therapy (HAART) response in HIV-infected children
in the UK and Ireland, 1996-2005
A Judd1, T Duong1, K Lee1, AS Walker1, PA
Tookey2, M Sharland3, A Riordan4, H Lyall5, J
Masters2, E Menson3, G Tudor-Williams5, K
Butler6, S Donaghy3, V Novelli7, C Peckham2, DM
Gibb1 for the Collaborative HIV Paediatric Study
and the National Study of HIV in Pregnancy and
Childhood
1 MRC CTU, London 2 Institute of Child Health,
London 3 St Georges Hospital, London 4 Royal
Liverpool Childrens Hospital, Liverpool 5 St
Marys Hospital, London 6 Our Ladys Hospital
for Sick Children, Dublin 7 Great Ormond Street
Hospital, London.
BACKGROUND The National Study of HIV in Pregnancy
and Childhood (NSHPC) is a voluntary
confidentialreporting scheme for HIV/AIDS
diagnoses in pregnant women and children,
covering the whole of the UK and Ireland. The
Collaborative HIV Paediatric Study (CHIPS) is a
multicentre cohort study of HIV infected children
under care in the UK and Ireland since 1996. 39
hospitals in the UK and Ireland currently
collaborate in the CHIPS study, accounting for
?90 of all children currently in the NSHPC.
CHIPS is being extended to the whole of the UK
and Ireland during 2006/7.
- METHODS
- Analyses relating to HAART exposure and response
are confined to children in CHIPS only (n1065).
All other analyses include all diagnosed children
(n1439) - Our definition of first line" 3 or 4 drug HAART
allows for 1 or 2 drug substitutions (if not made
for virological, immunological or clinical
failure), and drug intensifications or reductions - Logistic regression was used to explore responses
to HAART. All odds ratios (ORs) are adjusted
for age, CD4 and HIV-1 RNA at HAART initiation
sex CDC B/C events prior to HAART number of
drugs in the initial HAART regimen year started
HAART and timing of response measurements
- HOW THE NSHPC CHIPS WORK TOGETHER
- Children diagnosed with HIV are initially
reported to the NSHPC. Once the infection is
confirmed, the NSHPC informs CHIPS, which sends
out detailed annual followup questionnaires if
the child is seen in a hospital collaborating in
CHIPS. For hospitals not in CHIPS, abrief
annual follow up form is sent out by the NSHPC.
Data are shared between the studies in order
toundertake joint analyses. - AIM
- The aim of this analysis was to describe changes
overtime in demographics, morbidity and
mortality, and exposure and response to HAART, in
HIV infectedchildren in the UK and Ireland
between 1996 and 2005.
- SOCIODEMOGRAPHICS
- 50 female
- 72 black African, 13 white, 16 other
- 55 born in the UK and Ireland, 45 born abroad
- Median age at presentation varied by country of
birth - - constant for the UK and Ireland at 0.5 years
- - increased from 2 years up to 1991 to 8 years
in 2004/5 for those born abroad - 13 identified prospectively from birth, 68
prior to an AIDS diagnosis, and 19 at AIDS
diagnosis - 94 vertically infected, 3 blood transfusion, 3
other
- 12 MONTH IMMUNOLOGICAL AND VIROLOGICAL RESPONSE
TO HAART - 76 suppressed viral load lt400 copies/ml in
2003/5, compared to only 51 in 1997/9. - A cut off of lt50 copies/ml could not be used due
to some hospitals continuing to use the lt400
cut off in recent years. Multivariable.
Baseline1997/9
- HAART EXPOSURE AND SWITCHING
- 595 children in CHIPS started a HAART
regimensince 1997 and were ART naïve at the
start of HAART - 93 remained on first line HAART at 12
months,86 at 24 months, and 79 at 36 months - Median time to switching to second line was7.2
years - Whilst the proportion of child time spent on
threedrug ART was stable at 62 from 2000
onwards,the proportion of time spent off all
ART, having previously taken it, increased from
3 in 1997/9to 9 in 2003/5.
CD4 increase of gt10 CD4 increase of gt10 CD4 increase of gt10 HIV-1 RNA lt400 copies/ml HIV-1 RNA lt400 copies/ml HIV-1 RNA lt400 copies/ml
OR 95 CI p OR 95 CI p
Age at HAART per year 0.85 0.78-0.92 lt0.001 1.03 0.96-1.10 0.469
CD4 at HAART per 5 0.55 0.47-0.64 lt0.001 1.05 0.93-1.18 0.428
Sex female 1.68 1.01-2.81 0.044 0.97 0.60-1.57 0.905
Calendar year at HAART 2000/2 0.92 0.50-1.70 2.27 1.30-3.96
2003/5 1.12 0.59-2.12 0.833 2.99 1.60-5.59 0.001
- CONCLUSIONS
- Mortality and hospital admission rates continued
to decline since the introduction of HAART in
1997 - Viral load suppression 12 months after HAART
initiation improved over time - Results suggest a better immunological response
in girls, but require further investigation - Low rates of switching to second line therapy
were observed - Increased triple class exposure complicates
longer term clinical management - Provision of transitional services and continued
monitoring will be essential as the cohort ages
into adolescence and adulthood
- RATES OF PROGRESSION TO AIDS AND DEATH
- Rates (per 100 person years) have continued to
decline since the introduction of HAART - Year AIDS/deaths (95CI) Deaths (95CI)
- -1996 13.4 (11.4-15.6) 8.3 (6.9-9.8)
- 1997-9 5.7 (4.3-7.5) 1.9 (1.2-2.8)
- 2000-2 3.2 (2.3-4.3) 0.9 (0.6-1.5)
- 2003-5 2.7 (1.9-3.6) 0.6 (0.3-1.1)
- 18 children died in 2003-5
- 7 presented with AIDS and/or died within one
month - Of the remaining 11
- - only 3 were on HAART for 6 months prior to
death - - primary cause of death was opportunistic
infections (2), HIV encephalopathy (1), sepsis
(1), lung disease (1), other (3), and not
known (3)
PRIOR DRUG CLASS EXPOSURE OVER TIME
- At last follow up, 27 of 5-9, 33 of 10-14, and
38 of 15 year olds had been exposed to all
three main classes of HAART
COLLABORATORS We thank staff and families from
the hospitals collaborating inCHIPS/NSHPC, as
well as the UK Department of Health,Bristol-Myers
Squibb, Boehringer-Ingelheim, GlaxoSmithKline,
Roche,Abbott and Gilead for financial
support. CHIPS Steering Committee members Karina
Butler, Sheila Donaghy,David Dunn, Trinh Duong,
Di Gibb, Ali Judd, Hermione Lyall, Janet
Masters,Esse Menson, Vas Novelli, Catherine
Peckham, Andrew Riordan,Mike Sharland, Pat
Tookey, Gareth Tudor-Williams, Gillian Wait.
KEY PAPERS Gibb DM et al. Decline in mortality,
AIDS, and hospital admissions in perinatally
HIV-1 infected children in the United Kingdom and
Ireland. BMJ 2003,3271019. Walker AS et al.
Response to highly active antiretroviral therapy
varies with age the UK and Ireland Collaborative
HIV Paediatric Study. AIDS 2004,181915-1924. Men
son EN et al. Systematic inaccurate prescribing
of paediatric antiretroviral drugs - a good
example of universal bad practice in medicines
for children? BMJ - in press
CONTACT FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Ali Judd MRC
Clinical Trials Unit 222 Euston Road
44 20 7670 4830 London NW1 2DA
a.judd_at_ctu.mrc.ac.uk www.chipscohort.ac.uk