Divala Oscar, Michelo Charles, Ngwira Bagrey
Department of Public Health, School of Medicine, University of Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia.
Department of Community Health, College of Medicine, University of Malawi, Blantyre, Malawi.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2014 Nov 2;17(4 Suppl 3):19696. doi: 10.7448/IAS.17.4.19696. eCollection 2014.
Paediatric HIV infection significantly contributes to child morbidity and mortality in southern Africa. In Malawi as in most countries in the region, care of HIV-exposed children is constrained by the lack of area-specific information on their risk to dying and morbidity. This research estimates and compares morbidity and mortality events between HIV-exposed and -unexposed under-five children in a rural Malawian setting.
Data for children under the age of five collected from January 2009 to June 2011 at a demographic and health site in Karonga district of northern Malawi were analyzed. Morbidity and mortality rates among HIV-exposed and -unexposed children were calculated and compared using Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and Cox proportional hazard regression.
Overall (n=7,929) cohort data of under-five children born in a demographic and health site represented 12380.8 person years of observation (PYO) of which 3.1% were contributed by HIV-exposed infants. Females accounted for half of the sample, and the overall mean age was 18.4 months (SD 13.4) with older children in the HIV-unexposed group. All-cause morbidity rate was 337.6/1000 PYO (95% CI 327.5/1000-348.0/1000) and HIV-exposed children morbidity rate was 1.34 times higher (p<0.001) compared to HIV-unexposed children. integrated management of childhood illness (IMCI) pneumonia was the most common diagnosis (39.3%) in this cohort. Child mortality rate was 16.6/1000 PYO (95% CI 14.5-19.1) from 206 deaths. HIV-exposed children had 4.5 times higher (p<0.001) mortality rate compared to the HIV-unexposed children. Higher mortality rates were observed in children under one year (129.2/1000 PYO) compared to older age groups.
HIV exposure at birth has a greater impact on child morbidity and mortality especially in the first year of life. This underscores the need for targeted and synergetic interventions that included focused prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) which could reduce HIV transmission to children in their infancy in this setting.
在南部非洲,儿童感染艾滋病毒是导致儿童发病和死亡的重要因素。与该地区大多数国家一样,马拉维在照顾艾滋病毒暴露儿童方面,因缺乏针对当地儿童死亡和发病风险的特定信息而受到限制。本研究对马拉维农村地区五岁以下艾滋病毒暴露儿童和未暴露儿童的发病和死亡情况进行了估计和比较。
分析了2009年1月至2011年6月在马拉维北部卡龙加区一个人口与健康监测点收集的五岁以下儿童的数据。使用Kaplan-Meier生存分析和Cox比例风险回归计算并比较了艾滋病毒暴露儿童和未暴露儿童的发病率和死亡率。
在一个人口与健康监测点出生的五岁以下儿童的总体队列数据(n = 7929)代表了12380.8人年的观察期(PYO),其中3.1%由艾滋病毒暴露婴儿贡献。样本中女性占一半,总体平均年龄为18.4个月(标准差13.4),艾滋病毒未暴露组的儿童年龄较大。全因发病率为337.6/1000人年(95%置信区间327.5/1000 - 348.0/1000),艾滋病毒暴露儿童的发病率比未暴露儿童高1.34倍(p<0.001)。儿童疾病综合管理(IMCI)肺炎是该队列中最常见的诊断(39.3%)。儿童死亡率为16.6/1000人年(95%置信区间14.5 - 19.1),共206例死亡。艾滋病毒暴露儿童的死亡率比未暴露儿童高4.5倍(p<0.001)。一岁以下儿童的死亡率(129.2/1000人年)高于其他年龄组。
出生时暴露于艾滋病毒对儿童发病和死亡的影响更大,尤其是在生命的第一年。这突出了需要有针对性的协同干预措施,包括重点预防母婴传播(PMTCT),这可以减少在这种情况下婴儿期儿童感染艾滋病毒的情况。