Litcius/Paper detail

Mortality Among Children Aged <5 Years Living with HIV Who Are Receiving Antiretroviral Treatment — U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, 28 Supported Countries and Regions, October 2020–September 2022

Nickolas T. Agathis, Iyiola Faturiyele, Patricia Agaba, Kiva A. Fisher, Stephanie Hackett, Elfriede Agyemang, Neha Mehta, Gurpreet Kindra, Diane Morof, Immaculate Mutisya, Lennah Nyabiage, Katherine Battey, Ezeomu Olotu, Talent Maphosa, Catherine Motswere-Chirwa, Akeem T. Ketlogetswe, Jessica Mafa-Setswalo, Sikhathele Mazibuko, Maria Ines Tomo de Deus, Herminio Nhaguiombe, Edward Machage, Bridget Mugisa, Dolapo Ogundehin, Carolyn Mbelwa, Estella Birabwa, Monica Etima, Yakubu Adamu, Ismail Lawal, Jonah Maswai, Dorothy Njeru, Janet Mwambona, Boniface Nguhuni, Rosemary Mrina, Susan Hrapcak, George K. Siberry, Catherine Godfrey, Hilary T. Wolf

2023MMWR Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Globally, children aged <5 years, including those living with HIV who are not receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART), experience disproportionately high mortality. Global mortality among children living with HIV aged <5 years receiving ART is not well described. This report compares mortality and related clinical measures among infants aged <1 year and children aged 1-4 years living with HIV with those among older persons aged 5-14, 15-49, and ≥50 years living with HIV receiving ART services at all clinical sites supported by the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. During October 2020-September 2022, an average of 11,980 infants aged <1 year and 105,510 children aged 1-4 years were receiving ART each quarter; among these infants and children receiving ART, 586 (4.9%) and 2,684 (2.5%), respectively, were reported to have died annually. These proportions of infants and children who died ranged from four to nine times higher in infants aged <1 year, and two to five times higher in children aged 1-4 years, than the proportions of older persons aged ≥5 years receiving ART. Compared with persons aged ≥5 years living with HIV, the proportions of children aged <5 years living with HIV who experienced interruptions in treatment were also higher, and the proportions who had a documented HIV viral load result or a suppressed viral load were lower. Prioritizing and optimizing HIV and general health services for children aged <5 years living with HIV receiving ART, including those recommended in the WHO STOP AIDS Package, might help address these disproportionately poorer outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePediatricsAntiretroviral therapyViral loadHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)GerontologyDemographyFamily medicineSociologyHIV/AIDS Research and InterventionsHIV-related health complications and treatmentsPneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia detection and treatment
Mortality Among Children Aged &lt;5 Years Living with HIV Who Are Receiving Antiretroviral Treatment — U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, 28 Supported Countries and Regions, October 2020–September 2022 | Litcius