Determinants of durability of first-line antiretroviral therapy regimen and time from first-line failure to second-line antiretroviral therapy initiation

Archive ouverte

Desmonde, Sophie | Eboua, François, T | Malateste, Karen | Dicko, Fatoumata | Ekouévi, Didier, K | Ngbeché, Sylvie | Koueta, Fla | Sy, Haby, Signate | Renner, Lorna | Koumakpai, Siriatou, A | Leroy, Valériane

Edité par CCSD ; Wolters Kluwer -

International audience. Background: We described reasons for switching to second-line antiretroviral treatment (ART) and time to switch in HIV-infected children failing first-line ART in West Africa.

Methods:

We included all children aged 15 years or less, starting ART (at least three drugs) in the paediatric IeDEA clinical centres in five West-African countries. We estimated the incidence of switch (at least one a drug class change) within 24 months of ART and associated factors were identified in a multinomial logistic regression. Among children with clinical-immunological failure, we estimated the 24-month probability of switching to a second-line and associated factors, using competing risks. Children who switched to second-line ART following the withdrawal of nelfinavir in 2007 were excluded.

Results: Overall, 2820 children initiated ART at a median age of 5 years; 144 (5%) were on nelfinavir. At 24-month post-ART initiation, 188 (7%) had switched to second-line. The most frequent reasons were drug stock outs (20%), toxicity (18%), treatment failure (16%) and poor adherence (8%). Over the 24-month follow-up period, 322 (12%) children failed first-line ART after a median time of 7 months. Of these children, 21 (7%) switched to second-line after a median time of 21 weeks in failure. This was associated with older age [subdistribution hazard ratio (sHR) 1.21, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.10-1.33] and longer time on ART (sHR 1.16, 95% CI 1.07-1.25).

Conclusion:

Switches for clinical failure were rare and switches after an immunological failure were insufficient. These gaps reveal that it is crucial to advocate for both sustainable access to first-line and alternative regimens to provide adequate roll-out of paediatric ART programmes.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Association between age at antiretroviral therapy initiation and 24-month immune response in HIV-infected children in West Africa

Archive ouverte | Desmonde, Sophie | CCSD

International audience

Growth in the first 5 years after antiretroviral therapy initiation among HIV-infected children in the IeDEA West African Pediatric Cohort.

Archive ouverte | Jesson, Julie | CCSD

International audience. To describe growth evolution and its correlates in the first 5 years of antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation among HIV-infected children followed up in West Africa. All HIV-infected childr...

Effect of Age at Antiretroviral Therapy Initiation on Catch-up Growth Within the First 24 Months Among HIV-infected Children in the IeDEA West African Pediatric Cohort

Archive ouverte | Jesson, Julie | CCSD

International audience. Background: We described malnutrition and the effect of age at antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation on catch-up growth over 24 months among HIV-infected children enrolled in the Internatio...

Chargement des enrichissements...