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WHO technical recommendations on pediatric HIV care

WHO technical recommendations on pediatric HIV care. Summary of revised recommendations on diagnosis, clinical staging & immunological classification, & ART Dr Siobhan CROWLEY WHO, Geneva HIV Department. Universal Access to comprehensive package of prevention & care.

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WHO technical recommendations on pediatric HIV care

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  1. WHO technical recommendations on pediatric HIV care Summary of revised recommendations on diagnosis, clinical staging & immunological classification, & ART Dr Siobhan CROWLEY WHO, Geneva HIV Department

  2. Universal Access to comprehensive package of prevention & care CARE TREATMENT AND SUPPORT FOR ALL HIV EXPOSED • Early diagnostic testing for HIV infection • Infant feeding counselling and support • Co-trimoxazole prophylaxis • Assessment, management and follow up of common conditions • Regular Growth monitoring, developmental assessment and support • Immunization • Prevention, screening and management of tuberculosis • Prevention and treatment of malaria Care and support for for uninfected Early Diagnosis Care and support where status still unconfirmed Care for the infected child

  3. Public health programming for HIV Care • Multiple entry & delivery points • PMTCT • Hospital/U5Clinic/NRU - symptomatic patients • Community facilities • Home based care and outreach • Linkages with preventive services inc HIV T&C • Family friendly care • children + primary care givers seen in same setting • testing, support for siblings • Chronic disease approach • Clinical care teams • Integrated care & decentralized delivery • links to facilities closer to community (HBC) + task shifting

  4. Life course approach • Infants (< 18 mo) • Problem with confirming HIV diagnosis • Rapid progression • Less easy to use ARV formulations • Children(18 mo – 10 yr) • Survivors • Toxicities • Long-term non-progressors • Informing and disclosing • Adolescents (> 10 yr) • Identity and self image • Adherence • Toxicities • Informing & disclosure to family, peers and partners • Sexuality and fertility

  5. Co-trimoxazole • New Guidelines – • Experts meeting May 2005 • Guidelines development group review April 2006 • Due for publication June 2006 They address: • Adults and children • Starting, discontinuation • Toxicity and dosing

  6. Co-trimoxazole – when to start

  7. Discontinuation of primary CTX prophylaxis However if : Child > 5 yrs started CTP during infancy, d/c CTP can be considered where: stable on ART > 12 mo + CD4 > used to initiate CTX prophylaxis + good adherence + secure supply + access to ART [C- IV] & restart if CD4 falls below the initiation threshold or if new or recurrent WHO 2, 3 or 4 conditions occur [A- IV]

  8. Discontinuation in the context of CTX adverse reactions Severe adverse reactions to CTX in children uncommon: (in the CHAP study, one child developed rash among 534 children randomized to CTX or placebo) • CPT prophylaxis may need to be d/c in event of an adverse drug reaction. • Insufficient data on CPT desensitization in children to make any recommendations on its use in resource limited settings. • All starting CPT, & their guardians and caregivers, need verbal or written information on potential adverse effects and advised to stop the drug and report to their nearest health facility if CTX-related adverse events are suspected.

  9. Discontinuation of secondary CTX prophylaxis Two options can be recommended: • Secondary prophylaxis should be administered lifelong.[B-III] • Discontinuation of secondary CTX prophylaxis may be considered in children with immune recovery on ART based on the same CD4 criteria as for discontinuing primary prophylaxis. [C-III] (based on evidence that secondary CTX prophylaxis can be safely stopped in adults based CD4 cell count guided immune recover on ART)

  10. HIV Care & ART for children: guidelines development process Diagnosis of HIV • Working Draft prepared from TRG • Experts review - April 2006 • Draft for public review – end June 2006 Assessment & classification of HIV • June 2004 – expert meet • Regional consultations Dec 2005-Oct 2005 • Global consensus meeting – April 2006 • Now Final editing and layout – publication imminent ART • June 2005 -TRG expert meeting • Public review Oct- Nov 2005 • Writing group review Nov 2005 • Now Final editing and layout – publication imminent

  11. RECOMMENDATIONS - LABORATORY METHODS FOR EARLY DIAGNOSIS OF HIV INFECTION • Countries should strive to ensure access to virological testing (VT) for HIV is made available national wide [ A (I)] • Currently available HIV VT that can be considered include: • HIV PCR DNA [A(I)] • HIV RNA [A(I)] • U p24 [B (III)] Commercially available and in-house methods can be used provided their quality is validated, assured and documented. • Dried blood spots (DBS) can facilitate decentralization of access to HIV VT. Currently procedures for use of DBS exist for the following VT assays: • HIV DNA [A (I)] • HIV RNA [A (II)] • HIV UP24 [C (IV)] More evidence to support these recommendations should become available and published shortly.

  12. RECOMMENDATIONS - VIRAL TESTING contd • All the above HIV viral tests can be considered for use from 6 week of age irrespective of maternal ARV prophylaxis or ART DNA/RNA A(I) • Time period for use of viral tests to provide reliable diagnosis after discontinuation of Breastfeeding is 6 weeks A (II) • Single positive virological test at any age, should trigger clinical management as if HIV infected A (I)

  13. Presumptive diagnosis of severe HIV in HIV exposed infant Seropositive Infant; • AIDS indicators condition • Symptomatic with 2 or > two or more of the following: • oral thrush; • severe pneumonia** • severe sepsis* • Other factors to support diagnosis of severe HIV include: • Recent HIV-related maternal death; or • Advanced HIV disease in the mother; or • No history of PMTCT intervention • CD4 <25% • Confirmation of the diagnosis of HIV infection should be sought as soon as possible. (*) As defined in IMCI

  14. Revised Staging & Classification +

  15. Immunological classification- all ages

  16. Mortality by WHO stage (from CHAP data courtesy of Di Gibb) 1.00 STAGE 2 0.75 STAGE 3 0.50 Proportion surviving STAGE 4 0.25 0.00 0 .5 1 1.5 2 2.5 Years from randomisation Similar separation in all age groups, although absolute mortality varies

  17. 12-month mortality risk at selected thresholds for CD4%, CD4 count and TLC, by age

  18. CD4 Criteria for severe immunodeficiency

  19. TLC criteria of severe HIV immunodeficiency (for use only in infants children with confirmed HIV infection, clinical stage 2 & CD4 measurement is not available)

  20. Recommendations for initiating ART in HIV infected infants

  21. First Line ARV Drugs in children and young adolescents EFV AZT* or d4T 3TC or FTC ABC NVP Triple NRTI alternative approach# # Triple NRTI regimen can be considered where NNRTI options are complicated (e.g. viral hepatitis co-infection, TB co infection, pregnant adolescents or if CD4 count > 250 cells /mm3; severe reactions to NVP or EFV and HIV-2 infection).

  22. Second-line* Preferred first-line ddI + ABC + PI/r + ZDV or d4T* 3TC or FTC + NVP or EFV ABC + 3TC or FTC + NVP or EFV ddI + ZDV + PI/r Triple NRTI alternative ZDV or d4T* + 3TC or FTC + ABC NVP or EFV + PI/r *3TC can be maintained in a second line regimen

  23. Simplified weight based dosing tables

  24. Further information crowleys@who.int Web page: http://www.who.int/hiv/paediatric/en/index.html Scaling up antiretroviral therapy in resource-limited settings: Treatment guidelines for a public health approach' areavailable at: http://www.who.int/3by5/publications/documents/arv_guidelines/en/ ARV Toolkit & HIV Testing & counselling toolkit on line All integrated management tools: http://who.arvkit.net/tc/files/chronic_care_3_may_06.pdf Resources on HIV testing in children: http://www.who.int/hiv/toolkit/arv/en/index.jsp http://www.who.arvkit.net/tc/en/content.jsp?d=tc.10.23

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