Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida.
Department of Psychology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia.
AIDS. 2023 Jul 1;37(8):1239-1245. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000003553. Epub 2023 Mar 21.
Assessing neurodevelopmental functioning in early infancy is essential as this is a critical period for infant development. Infants born to mothers with HIV are at a greater risk of developmental delays than those born to mothers without HIV. In this study, we analyzed differences in early neurodevelopmental functioning for infants with HIV exposure versus HIV infection to inform infant screening and early intervention.
Participants were recruited from community health centers in Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. Prenatally, mothers completed baseline demographic assessment at 8 to 24-week gestation periods. Infant neurodevelopment was assessed using the Bayley Infant Neurodevelopmental Screener (BINS) 12 months postnatally. Five areas of development were assessed: cognition, receptive communication, expressive communication, fine motor ability, and gross motor ability.
Postnatal infant assessment using the BINS revealed that infants were at risk for neurodevelopmental delays across all domains assessed. Notably, infants exposed to HIV, regardless of HIV status, were 'at emerging risk' or 'at clear risk' for cognitive (43.5%), receptive communication (38.2%), expressive communication (53.1%), fine motor (49.9%), and gross motor delays (55.6%). Differences were noted by HIV status in the cognition domain, such that HIV-exposed infants were more likely to be at emerging or clear risk than HIV-infected infants. There was a different trend with gross motor delays, such that HIV-infected infants were at a greater risk for motor delays than HIV-exposed, uninfected infants.
Screening tools for this vulnerable population provide valuable early life assessment to determine infant needs for intervention and treatment planning. Such interventions may mitigate the impact of HIV status on neurodevelopmental health generally and cognition.
评估婴儿早期的神经发育功能至关重要,因为这是婴儿发育的关键时期。与未感染 HIV 的母亲所生的婴儿相比,感染 HIV 的母亲所生的婴儿发育迟缓的风险更高。在这项研究中,我们分析了 HIV 暴露与 HIV 感染婴儿早期神经发育功能的差异,为婴儿筛查和早期干预提供信息。
参与者是从南非姆普马兰加省的社区卫生中心招募的。在妊娠 8 至 24 周期间,母亲完成了基线人口统计学评估。婴儿神经发育在出生后 12 个月使用贝利婴幼儿神经发育筛查量表(BINS)进行评估。评估了五个发育领域:认知、接受性沟通、表达性沟通、精细运动能力和粗大运动能力。
使用 BINS 进行的婴儿产后评估显示,所有评估领域的婴儿都存在神经发育迟缓的风险。值得注意的是,无论 HIV 状况如何,暴露于 HIV 的婴儿在认知(43.5%)、接受性沟通(38.2%)、表达性沟通(53.1%)、精细运动(49.9%)和粗大运动(55.6%)方面都处于“新兴风险”或“明确风险”。在认知领域,根据 HIV 状况,HIV 暴露婴儿比 HIV 感染婴儿更有可能处于新兴或明确风险之中。粗大运动延迟方面则存在不同的趋势,感染 HIV 的婴儿比 HIV 暴露、未感染婴儿更有可能存在运动延迟的风险。
针对这一弱势群体的筛查工具提供了有价值的早期生命评估,以确定婴儿干预和治疗计划的需求。这种干预措施可能会减轻 HIV 状况对神经发育健康的总体影响,尤其是对认知的影响。