| Literature DB >> 27242792 |
Abstract
Surveillance of pregnancies in women living with HIV is carried out on a national basis in the United Kingdom (UK) through the National Study of HIV in Pregnancy and Childhood. There are currently around 1100-1200 HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU) infants born every year in the UK, where vertical transmission of HIV now occurs in fewer than 5 in every 1000 pregnancies. By the end of 2014, there was a cumulative total of more than 15,000 HEU children with any combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) exposure and more than 5000 with cART exposure from conception in the UK. HEU infants are increasingly being exposed to newer antiretroviral drugs for which less is known regarding both short- and long-term safety. In this commentary, we describe the approaches that have been taken to explore health outcomes in HEU children born in the UK. This includes the Children exposed to AntiRetroviral Therapy (CHART) Study, which was a consented follow-up study carried out in 2002-2005 of HEU children born in 1996-2004. The CHART Study showed that 4% of HEU children enrolled had a major health or development problem in early childhood; this was within expected UK norms, but the study was limited by small numbers and short-term follow-up. However, the problems with recruitment and retention that were encountered within the CHART Study demonstrated that comprehensive, clinic-based follow-up was not a feasible approach for long-term assessment of HEU children in the UK. We describe an alternative approach developed to monitor some aspects of their long-term health, involving the "flagging" of HEU infants for death and cancer registration with the UK Office for National Statistics. Some of the ethical concerns regarding investigation of long-term outcomes of in utero and perinatal exposure to antiretrovirals, including those relating to consent and confidentiality, are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-exposed; antiretroviral drugs; fetal exposure; safety; surveillance
Year: 2016 PMID: 27242792 PMCID: PMC4868959 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Flowchart providing enrollment in CHART Study and reasons for non-enrollment. *Paediatric respondent in the NSHPC.
Four follow-up options for HEU children explored in surveys of parents/carers and health-care professionals.
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
| Clinic contact | Annual follow-up visit at pediatric clinic with data (no names) sent to the NSHPC. Parents/carers would need to inform the clinic of contact detail changes |
| Telephone contact | Pediatric clinic staff would call parent/carer annually to collect brief information about the child’s general health. Responses entered on a form and sent to NSHPC (no names). Parents/carers would need to inform the clinic of contact detail changes |
| Postal contact | NSHPC would be provided with contact details of parent/carer by the clinic when the child was discharged from routine care. A short form on the child’s health would be sent to parent/carer annually for completion and return to NSHPC (no reference to HIV anywhere on the form or correspondence). Parents/carers would need to inform the NSHPC of contact detail changes |
| No direct contact | NSHPC uses child’s NHS number to link to routinely available health information. No further contact with clinic or NSHPC needed after child is discharged |