HIV AND AIDS IN CHILDREN
Description
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) is a retrovirus that attacks the body’s immune system, primarily CD4 T-lymphocytes. Untreated HIV can progress to Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), characterized by profound immunosuppression, severe organ damage, opportunistic infections, and malignancies.
Paediatric HIV transmission:
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Vertical (mother-to-child): In utero, intrapartum, or through breastfeeding — the most common mode in Zambia.
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Horizontal: Sexual transmission (e.g., rape, defilement, high-risk survival sex) or parenteral exposures (rare in children).
Pathophysiology:
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HIV infects CD4+ T cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells.
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Progressive CD4 depletion impairs cell-mediated immunity, increasing susceptibility to bacterial, viral, fungal, and protozoal infections.
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Chronic inflammation contributes to end-organ damage, growth failure, and neurodevelopmental delays in children.
Signs and Symptoms
Clinical manifestations of HIV in children are stage-dependent (WHO clinical staging, Zambia). Symptoms include:
| Stage | Key Signs / Symptoms |
|---|---|
| Stage 1 – Asymptomatic | No significant symptoms; growth may be normal. |
| Stage 2 – Mild symptoms | Recurrent upper respiratory infections, mild hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, skin conditions (seborrheic dermatitis). |
| Stage 3 – Advanced symptoms | Persistent fever, chronic diarrhoea >1 month, weight loss, pneumonia, oral candidiasis, tuberculosis. |
| Stage 4 – Severe / AIDS | Severe opportunistic infections (Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia, cryptococcal meningitis), malignancies (Kaposi’s sarcoma), wasting, severe growth failure, developmental delays, chronic neurological conditions. |
Other signs:
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Delayed milestones in infants
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Failure to thrive
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Recurrent bacterial infections
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Neurological impairment (HIV encephalopathy)
Investigations
Entry point to HIV care:
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HIV Testing Services (HTS): Should be offered to all children attending any health facility in Zambia (public and private).
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Positive test: Link immediately to care and treatment.
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Negative test: Link to combination HIV prevention services.
Laboratory investigations:
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Confirmatory HIV testing: PCR for children <18 months, rapid antibody tests for >18 months.
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CD4 count / percentage: Assess immune status.
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Viral load: Monitor ART effectiveness.
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Baseline labs: CBC, LFTs, renal function, hepatitis B/C testing.
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Screen for opportunistic infections: TB testing, cryptococcal antigen, CMV, toxoplasmosis if indicated.
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Growth and nutritional assessment: Weight, height, head circumference, BMI-for-age.
Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) in Children
Refer to: Zambia Consolidated Guidelines for Treatment and Prevention of HIV Infection (ZCGs).
Key principles:
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Early ART initiation: All children diagnosed with HIV should start ART regardless of clinical stage or CD4 count.
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Preferred regimens: Weight- and age-based combinations, e.g., integrase inhibitor-based regimens for children ≥4 weeks and ≥3 kg.
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Monitoring:
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Clinical: Growth, development, opportunistic infections
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Laboratory: Viral load at 6 months after ART initiation, then every 12 months if suppressed
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Supportive Care
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Nutritional support: High-calorie diet, micronutrient supplementation, manage malnutrition
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Prevention of opportunistic infections: Cotrimoxazole prophylaxis for bacterial infections and Pneumocystis jirovecii
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Vaccinations: Maintain routine immunizations; some live vaccines may be contraindicated in severe immunosuppression
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Psychosocial support: Disclosure counseling, caregiver education, adherence support
Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (PMTCT)
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Antenatal ART for HIV-positive mothers
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Safe delivery practices
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Infant prophylaxis: Nevirapine or zidovudine for newborns
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Exclusive breastfeeding with maternal ART
Summary
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HIV is a retrovirus targeting CD4+ T cells; untreated, it can progress to AIDS.
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Vertical transmission is the most common cause in children.
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Clinical staging guides severity assessment and management.
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HTS is the entry point to care; ART initiation is essential in all confirmed cases.
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Supportive care, nutritional optimization, prophylaxis, and psychosocial support are crucial.
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Adherence and regular monitoring improve long-term outcomes.