Department of Paediatrics and Child Health and Neuroscience Institute, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Medical Research Council Clinical Trials Unit at University College London, London, UK.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2023 Jun;26(6):e26079. doi: 10.1002/jia2.26079.
Co-trimoxazole prophylaxis is recommended for children born to women with HIV to protect those who acquire HIV from opportunistic infections, severe bacterial infections and malaria. With scale-up of maternal antiretroviral therapy, most children remain HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU) and the benefits of universal co-trimoxazole are uncertain. We assessed the effect of co-trimoxazole on mortality and morbidity of children who are HEU.
We performed a systematic review (PROSPERO number: CRD42021215059). We systematically searched MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane CENTRAL, Global Health, CINAHL Plus, Africa-Wide Information, SciELO and WHO Global Index Medicus for peer-reviewed articles from inception to 4th January 2022 without limits. Ongoing randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were identified through registries. We included RCTs reporting mortality or morbidity in children who are HEU receiving co-trimoxazole versus no prophylaxis/placebo. The risk of bias was assessed using the Cochrane 2.0 tool. Data were summarized using narrative synthesis and findings were stratified by malaria endemicity.
We screened 1257 records and included seven reports from four RCTs. Two trials from Botswana and South Africa of 4067 children who are HEU found no difference in mortality or infectious morbidity in children randomized to co-trimoxazole prophylaxis started at 2-6 weeks of age compared to those randomized to placebo or no treatment, although event rates were low. Sub-studies found that antimicrobial resistance was higher in infants receiving co-trimoxazole. Two trials in Uganda investigating prolonged co-trimoxazole after breastfeeding cessation showed protection against malaria but no other morbidity or mortality differences. All trials had some concerns or a high risk of bias, which limited the certainty of evidence.
Studies show no clinical benefit of co-trimoxazole prophylaxis in children who are HEU, except to prevent malaria. Potential harms were identified for co-trimoxazole prophylaxis leading to antimicrobial resistance. The trials in non-malarial regions were conducted in populations with low mortality potentially reducing generalizability to other settings.
In low-mortality settings with few HIV transmissions and well-performing early infant diagnosis and treatment programmes, universal co-trimoxazole may not be required.
复方新诺明预防方案被推荐用于 HIV 感染女性所生的儿童,以保护那些因机会性感染、严重细菌感染和疟疾而感染 HIV 的儿童。随着抗逆转录病毒疗法在孕产妇中的广泛应用,大多数儿童仍然处于 HIV 暴露但未感染(HEU)状态,普遍使用复方新诺明的益处尚不确定。我们评估了复方新诺明对 HEU 儿童的死亡率和发病率的影响。
我们进行了系统评价(PROSPERO 编号:CRD42021215059)。我们系统地检索了 MEDLINE、Embase、Cochrane 中心、全球卫生、CINAHL Plus、非洲广域信息、SciELO 和世界卫生组织全球医学索引,从创建到 2022 年 1 月 4 日,没有任何限制。正在进行的随机对照试验(RCT)通过登记处确定。我们纳入了报告接受复方新诺明预防与不预防/安慰剂相比,HEU 儿童死亡率或发病率的 RCT。使用 Cochrane 2.0 工具评估偏倚风险。使用叙述性综合法汇总数据,并按疟疾流行程度对结果进行分层。
我们筛选了 1257 条记录,纳入了四项 RCT 的七份报告。来自博茨瓦纳和南非的两项 RCT 共纳入了 4067 名 HEU 儿童,结果发现,与随机分配到安慰剂或不治疗的儿童相比,在 2-6 周龄开始接受复方新诺明预防的儿童,死亡率或传染性发病率没有差异,尽管事件发生率较低。子研究发现,接受复方新诺明治疗的婴儿的抗菌药物耐药性更高。在乌干达进行的两项关于母乳喂养结束后延长使用复方新诺明的试验表明,该药物可预防疟疾,但在其他发病率或死亡率方面没有差异。所有试验都存在一些担忧或高偏倚风险,这限制了证据的确定性。
研究表明,HEU 儿童接受复方新诺明预防方案没有临床益处,除了预防疟疾。还发现复方新诺明预防方案会导致抗菌药物耐药性的潜在危害。在非疟疾地区进行的试验是在死亡率较低的人群中进行的,这可能降低了将结果推广到其他环境的普遍性。
在 HIV 传播较少、早期婴儿诊断和治疗方案执行良好且死亡率较低的低死亡率环境中,可能不需要普遍使用复方新诺明。