Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
ICAP at Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA; Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Lancet Child Adolesc Health. 2019 Apr;3(4):234-244. doi: 10.1016/S2352-4642(19)30007-0. Epub 2019 Feb 15.
Over 1 million HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU) children are born in sub-Saharan Africa annually. Little data exist on the risk of impaired growth in this population under current policies of universal maternal antiretroviral therapy (ART) with breastfeeding. We aimed to study the growth of breastfed HEU children born to women who initiated ART during pregnancy and compare their growth with that of breastfed HIV-unexposed (HU) children drawn from the same community.
A prospective cohort of HIV-uninfected and HIV-infected pregnant women, who were initiating ART, were enrolled at their first antenatal care visit in a primary care centre in Gugulethu, Cape Town, South Africa. HIV infected women were participants of the Maternal Child Health Antiretroviral Therapy (MCH-ART) study, and HIV-uninfected pregnant women were participants in the HIV-Unexposed-Uninfected (HU2) study. All women were followed up during pregnancy, through delivery, to the early postnatal visit, which was scheduled for the first week after birth. At this visit, eligible breastfeeding mother-child pairs were recruited for continuation of postnatal follow-up until approximately age 12 months. Child anthropometry was measured at around 6 weeks, and every 3 months from month 3 to month 12. Weight-for-age (WAZ), length-for-age (LAZ), weight-for-length (WLZ), head circumference-for-age, and body-mass index-for-age Z scores were compared between HEU and HU children longitudinally using mixed effects linear regression. At 12 months, proportions of HEU and HU children with moderate or severe malnutrition were compared cross-sectionally using logistic regression. MCH-ART is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01933477.
Between June, 2013, and April, 2016, 884 breastfeeding mothers and their newborn babies (HEU, n=471; HU, n=413) were enrolled into postnatal follow-up. Excluding 12 children who tested HIV positive during follow-up, 461 HEU and 411 HU children attended 4511 study visits in total, with a median of 6 visits (IQR 5-6) per child. Birth characteristics were similar (overall, 94 [11%] of 872 preterm [<37 weeks] and 90 [10%] small-for-gestational age [birthweight <10th percentile]). Median duration of breastfeeding was shorter among HEU than HU children (3·9 months [IQR 1·4-12·0] vs 9·0 months [IQR 3·0-12·0]). Although WAZ scores increased over time in both groups, HEU children had consistently lower mean WAZ scores than HU children (overall β -0·34, 95% CI -0·47 to -0·21). LAZ scores decreased in both groups after 9 months. At 12 months, HEU children had lower mean LAZ scores than HU children (β -0·43, -0·61 to -0·25), with a higher proportion of children stunted (LAZ score <-2: 35 [10%] of 342 HEU vs 14 [4%] of 342 HU children; odds ratio [OR] 2·67, 95% CI 1·41 to 5·06). Simultaneously, overweight (WLZ score >2) was common in both groups of children at 12 months (54 [16%] of 342 HEU vs 60 [18%] of 340 HU children; OR 0·87, 95% CI 0·58 to 1·31).
Compared with HU children, HEU children have small deficits in early growth trajectories under policies of universal maternal ART and breastfeeding. Large proportions of both HEU and HU children were overweight by 12 months, indicating substantial risks for early onset obesity among South African children. Although the longer-term metabolic effects of ART exposure in the context of childhood obesity warrants further investigation, addressing childhood obesity should be an urgent public health priority in this setting.
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, South African Medical Research Council, and the Fogarty Foundation.
每年有超过 100 万艾滋病毒暴露但未感染(HEU)的儿童在撒哈拉以南非洲出生。在目前普遍实施的母婴抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)和母乳喂养政策下,关于这一人群生长受损风险的数据很少。我们旨在研究在母亲怀孕期间开始接受 ART 的 HIV 阴性孕妇所生的母乳喂养的 HEU 儿童的生长情况,并将其与来自同一社区的 HIV 未暴露(HU)儿童的生长情况进行比较。
在南非开普敦古古莱图的一个基层医疗中心,前瞻性地招募了 HIV 阴性和 HIV 阳性的孕妇,这些孕妇在第一次产前检查时开始接受 ART。感染 HIV 的女性是母婴健康抗逆转录病毒治疗(MCH-ART)研究的参与者,而 HIV 阴性的孕妇是 HIV 未暴露未感染(HU2)研究的参与者。所有的女性在怀孕期间、分娩时以及产后早期(出生后第一周)的随访中都进行了随访。在这个访视中,符合条件的母乳喂养母婴对被招募继续进行产后随访,直到大约 12 个月大。大约在 6 周时,以及从第 3 个月到第 12 个月,每 3 个月测量一次儿童的人体测量学指标。使用混合效应线性回归法,纵向比较 HEU 和 HU 儿童的体重年龄 Z 评分(WAZ)、长度年龄 Z 评分(LAZ)、体重长度 Z 评分(WLZ)、头围年龄 Z 评分和体重指数年龄 Z 评分。在 12 个月时,使用逻辑回归法比较 HEU 和 HU 儿童中中度或重度营养不良的比例。MCH-ART 在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上注册,编号为 NCT01933477。
2013 年 6 月至 2016 年 4 月期间,共招募了 884 名母乳喂养的母亲及其新生儿(HEU,n=471;HU,n=413)进行产后随访。排除了 12 名随访中 HIV 阳性的儿童,共有 461 名 HEU 和 411 名 HU 儿童共参加了 4511 次研究访问,中位数为 6 次(IQR 5-6)。出生特征相似(总体上,94 名[11%]早产儿[<37 周]和 90 名[10%]小于胎龄儿[出生体重<第 10 百分位])。HEU 儿童的母乳喂养中位数明显短于 HU 儿童(3.9 个月[IQR 1.4-12.0]vs 9.0 个月[IQR 3.0-12.0])。尽管两组的 WAZ 评分都随时间增加,但 HEU 儿童的平均 WAZ 评分始终低于 HU 儿童(总体β-0.34,95%CI-0.47 至-0.21)。LAZ 评分在 9 个月后在两组中均下降。在 12 个月时,HEU 儿童的平均 LAZ 评分低于 HU 儿童(β-0.43,-0.61 至-0.25),且有更多的儿童发育迟缓(LAZ 评分<-2:35 名[10%]342 名 HEU 儿童与 14 名[4%]342 名 HU 儿童;比值比[OR]2.67,95%CI 1.41 至 5.06)。同时,12 个月时两组儿童超重(WLZ 评分>2)的比例都很高(54 名[16%]342 名 HEU 儿童与 60 名[18%]340 名 HU 儿童;OR 0.87,95%CI 0.58 至 1.31)。
与 HU 儿童相比,在普遍实施母婴 ART 和母乳喂养的政策下,HEU 儿童的早期生长轨迹存在较小的缺陷。在 12 个月时,HEU 和 HU 儿童都有很大比例的超重,这表明南非儿童早期肥胖的风险很大。尽管在儿童肥胖的背景下,ART 暴露的长期代谢影响仍需要进一步研究,但解决儿童肥胖问题应是这一环境下的紧急公共卫生优先事项。
美国国立卫生研究院儿童健康与人类发育办公室、伊丽莎白·格拉泽儿科艾滋病基金会、南非医学研究理事会和福格蒂国际中心。