In resource-limited settings good early outcomes can be achieved in children using adult fixed-dose combination antiretroviral therapy.

O'Brien DP Sauvageot D Zachariah R Humblet P
AIDS (London, England) 2006 Oct 03; 20(15); 1955-60. doi: 10.1097/01.aids.0000247117.66585.ce. Epub 2007 10 24

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To (a) determine early treatment outcomes and (b) assess safety in children treated with adult fixed-dose combination (FDC) antiretroviral tablets.

SETTING: Sixteen Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) HIV programs in eight countries in resource-limited settings (RLS).

METHODS: Analysis of routine program data gathered June 2001 to March 2005.

RESULTS: A total of 1184 children [median age, 7 years; inter-quartile range (IQR), 4.6-9.3] were treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART) of whom 616(52%) were male. At ART initiation, Centres for Disease Control stages N, A, B and C were 9, 14, 38 and 39%, respectively. Children were followed up for a median period of 6 months (IQR, 2-12 months). At 12 months the median CD4 percentage gain in children aged 18-59 months was 15% (IQR, 6-18%), and the percentage with CD4 gain

CONCLUSIONS: Very satisfactory early outcomes can be achieved in children in RLS using generic adult FDC antiretroviral tablets. These findings strongly favour their use as an "interim solution" for scaling-up ART in children; however, more appropriate pediatric antiretroviral drugs remain urgently needed.