1. Growth in the first 5 years after antiretroviral therapy initiation among HIV-infected children in the IeDEA West African Pediatric Cohort.
- Author
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Jesson J, Ephoevi-Ga A, Desmonde S, Ake-Assi MH, D'Almeida M, Sy HS, Malateste K, Amorissani-Folquet M, Dicko F, Kouadio K, Renner L, and Leroy V
- Subjects
- Africa, Western epidemiology, Anthropometry, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Databases, Factual, Female, Growth Disorders, HIV Infections epidemiology, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Linear Models, Male, Malnutrition epidemiology, Time Factors, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Child Development, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections drug therapy, Malnutrition complications
- Abstract
Objective: To describe growth evolution and its correlates in the first 5 years of antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation among HIV-infected children followed up in West Africa., Methods: All HIV-infected children younger than 10 years followed in the IeDEA pWADA cohort while initiating ART, with at least one anthropometric measurement within the first 5 years of treatment were included in the study. Growth was described according to the WHO child growth standards, using Weight-for-age Z-score (WAZ), Height-for-age Z-score (HAZ) and Weight-for-Height/BMI-for-age Z-score (WHZ/BAZ). Growth evolution and its correlates, measured at ART initiation, were modelled in individual linear mixed models for each anthropometric indicator, with a spline term added at the 12-, 24- and 9-month time point for WAZ, HAZ and WHZ/BAZ, respectively., Results: Among the 4156 children selected (45% girls, median age at ART initiation 3.9 years [IQR interquartile range 1.9-6.6], and overall 68% malnourished at ART initiation), important gains were observed in the first 12, 24 and 9 months on ART for WAZ, HAZ and WHZ/BAZ, respectively. Correlates at ART initiation of a better growth evolution overtime were early age (<2 years of age), severe immunodeficiency for age, and severity of malnutrition., Conclusions: Growth evolution is particularly strong within the first 2 years on ART but slows down after this period. Weight and height gains help to recover from pre-ART growth deficiency but are insufficient for the most severely malnourished. The first year on ART could be the best period for nutritional interventions to optimize growth among HIV-infected children in the long-term., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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