Abstract

IntroductionAll infants born to HIV-positive mothers have maternal HIV antibodies, sometimes persistent for 18 months. When Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) is not available, August 2006 World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations suggest that clinical criteria may be used for starting antiretroviral treatment (ART) in HIV seropositive children <18 months. Predictors are at least two out of sepsis, severe pneumonia and thrush, or any stage 4 defining clinical finding according to the WHO staging system.Methods and ResultsFrom January 2005 to October 2006, we conducted a prospective study on 236 hospitalized children <18 months old with a positive HIV serological test at the national reference hospital in Kigali. The following data were collected: PCR, clinical signs and CD4 cell count.Current proposed clinical criteria were present in 148 of 236 children (62.7%) and in 95 of 124 infected children, resulting in 76.6% sensitivity and 52.7% specificity. For 87 children (59.0%), clinical diagnosis was made based on severe unexplained malnutrition (stage 4 clinical WHO classification), of whom only 44 (50.5%) were PCR positive. Low CD4 count had a sensitivity of 55.6% and a specificity of 78.5%.ConclusionAs PCR is not yet widely available, clinical diagnosis is often necessary, but these criteria have poor specificity and therefore have limited use for HIV diagnosis. Unexplained malnutrition is not clearly enough defined in WHO recommendations. Extra pulmonary tuberculosis (TB), almost impossible to prove in young children, may often be the cause of malnutrition, especially in HIV-affected families more often exposed to TB. Food supplementation and TB treatment should be initiated before starting ART in children who are staged based only on severe malnutrition.

Highlights

  • All infants born to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive mothers have maternal HIV antibodies, sometimes persistent for 18 months

  • Extra pulmonary tuberculosis (TB), almost impossible to prove in young children, may often be the cause of malnutrition, especially in HIV-affected families more often exposed to TB

  • Food supplementation and TB treatment should be initiated before starting antiretroviral treatment (ART) in children who are staged based only on severe malnutrition

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Summary

Introduction

All infants born to HIV-positive mothers have maternal HIV antibodies, sometimes persistent for 18 months. The possibility of treating children having positive clinical signs and a positive HIV serological test, without the obligation of doing PCR is an important opportunity [7], preventing children from dying in places where ART is already available and free of charge, but where diagnostic PCR is not. These problems primarily affect African countries, and 420 000 children are newly infected every year worldwide [8]

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