Clinical and Laboratory Characteristics of a Large Cohort of Symptomatic, Human Immunodeficiency Virus-infected Infants and Children
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
- Vol. 15 (11), 1025-1036
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006454-199611000-00018
Abstract
A large cohort of antiretroviral therapy-naive, symptomatic, HIV-infected children were enrolled into a controlled therapeutic trial (AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol 152), providing an opportunity to describe their clinical and laboratory characteristics and determine age-related distinctions. Study entry evaluations for 838 of 839 enrolled children were analyzed. Weight, head circumference (if < 30 months of age), neuroradiologic imaging of the head, developmental or cognitive status and neurologic examination were assessed. Laboratory studies included hemoglobin, absolute neutrophil count, CD4 cell count, serum amylase, alanine aminotransaminase, p24 antigen and HIV blood culture. Data were categorized by age (3 to < 12 months, 12 to < 30 months, 30 months to 6 years and > or = 6 years). Younger children had significantly higher rates of abnormalities before antiretroviral therapy, especially factors relating to growth and neurologic or cognitive function. Lower CD4+ cell counts and percentages as well as a positive serum p24 antigen correlated with lower weight-for-age Z scores and developmental indices. These data provide a description of the clinical characteristics of HIV-infected US children at the time antiretroviral therapy is initiated for HIV-related symptoms. The high rate of abnormalities of growth, development and cognitive ability that were observed in children < 30 months of age demonstrates that treatment strategies should be developed for earlier intervention.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prevalence and incidence of vertically acquired HIV infection in the United StatesPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1995
- Cognitive assessment of school-age children infected with maternally transmitted human immunodeficiency virus type 1The Journal of Pediatrics, 1995
- Reduction of Maternal-Infant Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 with Zidovudine TreatmentNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- Development and significance of zidovudine resistance in children infected with human immunodeficiency virusThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1993
- Prognostic factors and survival in children with perinatal HIV-1 infectionThe Lancet, 1992
- A Multicenter Trial of Oral Zidovudine in Children with Advanced Human Immunodeficiency Virus DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Children born to women with HIV-1 infection: natural history and risk of transmissionThe Lancet, 1991
- Dideoxyinosine in Children with Symptomatic Human Immunodeficiency Virus InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Neurologic signs in young children with human immunodeficiency virus infectionThe Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 1990
- Human immunodeficiency virus infection in childrenThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1989