Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T08:33:59.589Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Predictors and consequences of anaemia among antiretroviral-naïve HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected children in Tanzania

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2009

Anirban Chatterjee*
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA
Ronald J Bosch
Affiliation:
Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA
Roland Kupka
Affiliation:
Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA
David J Hunter
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA
Gernard I Msamanga
Affiliation:
Department of Community Health Sciences, Muhimbili University College of Health Sciences, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Wafaie W Fawzi
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA
*
*Corresponding author: Email [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objective

Predictors and consequences of childhood anaemia in settings with high HIV prevalence are not well known. The aims of the present study were to identify maternal and child predictors of anaemia among children born to HIV-infected women and to study the association between childhood anaemia and mortality.

Design

Prospective cohort study. Maternal characteristics during pregnancy and Hb measurements at 3-month intervals from birth were available for children. Information was also collected on malaria and HIV infection in the children, who were followed up for survival status until 24 months after birth.

Setting

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

Subjects

The study sample consisted of 829 children born to HIV-positive women.

Results

Advanced maternal clinical HIV disease (relative risk (RR) for stage ≥2 v. stage 1: 1·31, 95 % CI 1·14, 1·51) and low CD4 cell counts during pregnancy (RR for <350 cells/mm3v. ≥350 cells/mm3: 1·58, 95 % CI 1·05, 2·37) were associated with increased risk of anaemia among children. Birth weight <2500 g, preterm birth (<34 weeks), malaria parasitaemia and HIV infection in the children also increased the risk of anaemia. Fe-deficiency anaemia in children was an independent predictor of mortality in the first two years of life (hazard ratio 1·99, 95 % CI 1·06, 3·72).

Conclusions

Comprehensive care including highly active antiretroviral therapy to eligible HIV-infected women during pregnancy could reduce the burden of anaemia in children. Programmes for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV and antimalarial treatment to children could improve child survival in settings with high HIV prevalence.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2009

Anaemia is a major public health problem in most developing countries. Globally, anaemia is present in approximately 43 % of children under the age of 4 years(Reference Ezzati, Lopez, Rodgers, Vander Hoorn and Murray1) with close to 75 % of children under 5 years of age suffering from anaemia in East Africa(2). Studies from sub-Saharan Africa have reported anaemia prevalence ranging from 42 % to 75 % among HIV-infected children(Reference Belperio and Rhew3). Fe-deficiency anaemia is the commonest form of anaemia, and is estimated to constitute approximately 50 % of the total burden of anaemia albeit with wide geographic variation(Reference DeMaeyer and Adiels-Tegman4Reference Stoltzfus and Dreyfus6). It is a risk factor for delayed psychomotor development and cognitive function and also impairs cell-mediated immunity(Reference Lozoff, Brittenham, Wolf, McClish, Kuhnert, Jimenez, Jimenez, Mora, Gomez and Krauskoph7Reference Bhaskaram and Reddy10). Because of the long-term effects of Fe-deficiency anaemia during infancy it is important to prevent and treat it appropriately as early in infancy as possible. Little is known about the association between maternal factors during pregnancy among HIV-infected women and the development of anaemia in their children. Maternal factors that are treatable or preventable could be potential targets for public health interventions aimed at reducing the burden of anaemia in children.

Among HIV-infected adults, anaemia is known to be a risk factor for mortality in studies from both developed and developing countries(Reference Mocroft, Kirk, Barton, Dietrich, Proenca, Colebunders, Pradier, dArminio Monforte, Ledergerber and Lundgren11, Reference O’Brien, Kupka, Msamanga, Saathoff, Hunter and Fawzi12). Little is known about the association between anaemia and mortality in HIV-infected and uninfected children born to HIV-infected women in sub-Saharan Africa. We examined the associations between maternal and child factors and development of anaemia in children until 24 months of age. We also studied the relationship between anaemia in HIV-infected and uninfected children born to HIV-infected women and child mortality in the first two years of life.

Experimental methods

The current prospective study was conducted in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania within the setting of a randomized trial of vitamin supplementation of HIV-infected women during pregnancy and lactation. Details of the trial have been published elsewhere(Reference Fawzi, Msamanga and Spiegelman13). HIV-infected women were between 12 and 27 weeks of gestation (mean 20 (sd 3) weeks) and, after giving informed consent, were randomized in a double-blind factorial design to one of four arms: vitamin A, vitamin A and multivitamins, multivitamins excluding vitamin A or placebo. All women received standard antenatal care including daily supplementation with Fe and folic acid as well as weekly doses of chloroquine phosphate as per national guidelines in Tanzania. Women in the vitamin A arm received another high dose of vitamin A at delivery while others received a placebo. Antiretroviral therapy was not yet widely available in Tanzania during the period when the study was conducted and none of the mothers or children received antiretroviral therapy during the course of the study.

At the time of enrolment detailed background information including educational levels were collected from all women using standardized questionnaires administered by trained research nurses, who also measured the women’s weight, height and left mid upper-arm circumference using calibrated instruments and standardized techniques(Reference Lohman, Roche and Martorell14). Detailed medical information was collected and a complete physical examination including vaginal examination was conducted by trained physicians. The women provided blood samples for determination of Hb, CD4 T-lymphocyte count and infection with Plasmodium falciparum malaria, as well stool samples for intestinal parasitic infestation. Birth weight was measured to the nearest 10 g using a standard beam balance (model 725; Seca, Hamburg, Germany) immediately after birth and gestational age was evaluated on the basis of maternal recall of last menstrual period. Children born to women enrolled in the trial were followed from birth through monthly visits to the study clinics; home visits were made in cases where a scheduled clinic visit was missed. The children provided blood samples at birth and every 3 months thereafter for determination of Hb and erythrocyte morphology as well as infection with P. falciparum malaria. CD4 T-lymphocyte counts were determined at birth and every 6 months thereafter, while HIV infection status was determined at birth, at 6 weeks and then at 3-month intervals.

Hb was measured using a CBC5 Coulter counter (Coulter Corporation, Miami, FL, USA). However, due to machine breakdown, the method was changed to the cyanmethaemoglobin method using a colorimeter (Corning, Corning, NY, USA) in the later part of the study. Erythrocyte morphology was examined in thin blood films stained with Leishman’s stain. For the analysis reported in the present paper, we considered the erythrocyte morphology to be microcytic and hypochromic if >75 % of the cells examined showed microcytosis and hypochromasia. Infection with P. falciparum malaria was identified using Giemsa-stained thick and thin blood films. Parasite density was estimated by counting the number of parasites in 300 leucocytes and assuming a total leucocyte count of 8000/mm3 blood. Measurements of absolute counts of CD4 T cells were done using the FACScan and FACScount system (Beckton-Dickinson, San Jose, CA, USA). HIV-1 infection was diagnosed in the children on the basis of a positive peripheral mononuclear cell specimen by PCR before 18 months of age (using the Amplicor HIV-1 detection kit; Roche Diagnostics, Branchburg, NJ, USA) or a positive ELISA confirmed by a Western blot at or after 18 months of age. The time of HIV infection was designated as the midpoint between the last negative and the first positive HIV test. To the 1078 HIV-infected women enrolled in the trial, 984 live-born children were delivered. The study population consisted of 829 singleton children who had at least one Hb measurement available. There was no difference in the background characteristics of the 829 live-born children who were included in the analysis and those who were not included due to non-availability of at least one Hb measurement. For the present analysis child anaemia was defined in two different ways: anaemia (Hb < 8·5 g/dl) and anaemia suggestive of Fe deficiency (Hb < 8·5 g/dl and hypochromic microcytic erythrocyte morphology with >75 % cells showing hypochromasia and microcytosis).

Generalized estimating equations (GEE; PROC GENMOD in the SAS statistical software package version 9·1 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA)) were used to examine the association between maternal and infant factors and child anaemia and child anaemia suggestive of Fe deficiency separately(Reference Diggle, Liang and Zeger15). A GEE model with exchangeable working covariance structure was used and a binomial distribution was specified. All covariates with P ≤ 0·20 in the univariate models were entered into a multivariate model. Cox proportional hazards models (PROC PHREG in SAS) were fit to examine the association between child anaemia and mortality until 24 months of age. Child anaemia was defined in the same manner as for the analysis above and entered into univariate and multivariate models as a time-dependent covariate. The missing indicator method was used for covariates with missing data(Reference Miettinen16).

The study protocol was approved by the Research and Publications Committee of Muhimbili University College of Health Sciences, the Ethical Committee of the National AIDS Control Program of the Tanzanian Ministry of Health, and the Institutional Review Board of the Harvard School of Public Health.

Results

A total of 3351 Hb measurements were available from 829 children over the 24 months of follow-up for an average of four measurements per child. The mean Hb level over all measurement occasions was 9·99 g/dl and the median was 9·70 g/d (25th, 75th percentile: 8·6, 11·2 g/dl). Twenty-three per cent of the Hb measurements were below 8·5 g/dl.

Maternal WHO HIV clinical disease stage ≥2 during pregnancy as compared with stage 1 was significantly associated with increased risk of anaemia in children up to 24 months of age (relative risk (RR) 1·31; 95 % CI 1·14, 1·51; Table 1). The risk of developing anaemia in the children was increased if their mothers had a malaria parasite density ≥1000/mm3 during pregnancy compared with no parasites (RR 1·22; 95 % CI 1·04, 1·43). HIV infection in the child and malaria in the child were also independently associated with increased risk of anaemia (HIV infection: RR 1·61; 95 % CI 1·40, 1·85 and malaria: RR 1·52; 95 % CI 1·25, 1·85).

Table 1 Maternal and child factors in relation to anaemia (Hb < 8·5 g/dl) among children born to HIV-infected women, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

*From separate univariate models using generalized estimating equations with a binomial distribution and a log link.

†From separate multivariate models using generalized estimating equations with a binomial distribution and a log link. The multivariate model included all the variables in the column except gestational age at birth and the following additional variables: maternal trial regimen, daily per capita amount of money spent on food and age child started semi-solid foods.

‡In an additional model gestational age at birth replaced birth weight.

§HIV infection and malaria were included as time-dependent covariates.

We also examined anaemia suggestive of Fe deficiency in the children based on Hb and erythrocyte morphology and found that maternal CD4 cell count <350 cells/mm3 during pregnancy was associated with a significantly increased risk (RR 1·58; 95 % CI 1·05, 2·37; Table 2). The risk of anaemia suggestive of Fe deficiency was also increased if the child was HIV-infected or had malaria.

Table 2 Maternal and child factors in relation to anaemia suggestive of iron deficiency among children born to HIV-infected women, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

*From separate univariate models using generalized estimating equations with a binomial distribution and a log link.

†From separate multivariate models using generalized estimating equations with a binomial distribution and a log link. The multivariate model included all the variables in the column except gestational age at birth and the following additional variables: maternal trial regimen, daily per capita amount of money spent on food and age child started semi-solid foods.

‡In an additional model gestational age at birth replaced birth weight.

§HIV infection and malaria were included as time-dependent covariates.

Next we examined anaemia in the children as a time-dependent predictor of child mortality to 24 months of age. There were a total of 177 deaths over 15 472 child-months of follow-up. Anaemia suggestive of Fe deficiency was associated with a statistically significant twofold increased risk of death in the total cohort (hazard ratio (HR) 1·99; 95 % CI 1·06, 3·72; Table 3). Child anaemia defined as Hb < 8·5 g/dl did not show a statistically significant association with mortality overall (HR 1·38; 95 % CI 0·95, 2·01). However, Hb < 8·5 g/dl was associated with a borderline statistically significant increased risk of death in the HIV-uninfected subgroup (HR 1·86; 95 % CI 0·96, 3·61; P = 0·07; Table 4).

Table 3 Association of child anaemia with overall mortality among children born to HIV-infected women, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

*From separate univariate Cox proportional hazards models with anaemia as a time-dependent covariate.

†From separate multivariate Cox proportional hazards models with anaemia as a time-dependent covariate. The multivariate models also included the following adjusting variables, with indicator variables for individuals missing data on a particular variable: maternal trial regimen, CD4 cell count during pregnancy, education, daily per capita amount of money spent on food and the child variables of birth weight, age started semi-solid foods, time-varying CD4 cell counts, malaria parasitaemia and HIV infection status.

Table 4 Association of child anaemia with mortality stratified by HIV status among children born to HIV-infected women, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

*From separate univariate Cox proportional hazards models with anaemia as a time-dependent covariate.

†From separate multivariate Cox proportional hazards models with anaemia as a time-dependent covariate. The multivariate models also included the following adjusting variables, with indicator variables for individuals missing data on a particular variable: maternal trial regimen, CD4 cell count during pregnancy, education, daily per capita amount of money spent on food and the child variables of birth weight, age started semi-solid foods, time-varying CD4 cell counts and malaria parasitaemia.

Discussion

We found a positive association between advanced maternal HIV disease stage during pregnancy defined clinically as per WHO criteria and development of childhood anaemia (Hb < 8·5 g/dl). Maternal CD4 cell count <350 cells/mm3 during pregnancy was associated with development of anaemia suggestive of Fe deficiency in children in the first two years of life. There were fewer children classified as having Fe-deficiency anaemia and the smaller number of ‘events’ in the present analysis could be a potential reason why maternal HIV disease stage did not show a statistically significant association even though the point estimate from the univariate analysis showed an increased risk. Advanced clinical and immunological maternal HIV disease during pregnancy has been shown to be associated with increased risk of mortality in children(Reference Blanche, Rouzioux and Moscato17Reference Chatterjee, Bosch, Hunter, Fataki, Msamanga and Fawzi22). Advanced maternal HIV disease could interfere with the transfer of Fe that occurs from the mother to the fetus and also fetal haematopoiesis is affected by maternal HIV infection(Reference Widdowson and Spray23Reference Burnstein, Rashbaum, Hatch, Calvelli, Golodner, Soeiro and Lyman25). Placental malaria has been shown to be associated with child anaemia at 2 months(Reference Reed, Wirima and Stekeete26) and 6 months of age(Reference Cornet, Le Hesran, Fievet, Cot, Personne, Gounoue, Beyeme and Deloron27) among children born to HIV-uninfected mothers. Our study extends these findings by demonstrating that the increased risk of child anaemia due to maternal malaria during pregnancy may extend into the second year of life among children born to HIV-infected women.

These results are in agreement with earlier smaller studies from sub-Saharan Africa, which reported a high prevalence of anaemia among children with HIV infection who were not on antiretroviral therapy(Reference Adewuyi and Chitsike28Reference Eley, Sive, Shuttleworth and Hussey31) and noted HIV infection to be associated with a decrease in Hb levels over time(Reference Villamor, Mbise, Spiegelman, Ndossi and Fazwi32). HIV infection in children could cause anaemia by interfering with haematopoiesis or absorption of Fe and the presence of opportunistic infections(Reference Semba and Gray33).

We noted a positive association between anaemia in the children and mortality over the period of follow-up. However, only anaemia suggestive of Fe deficiency was statistically significantly related to mortality. In Uganda, antiretroviral-naïve HIV-infected children with anaemia (Hb < 9 g/dl) at 9 months had a 59 % increased risk of death by 36 months of age(Reference Clark, Mmiro, Ndugwa, Perry, Jackson, Melikian and Semba34) and anaemia was also a predictor of disease progression among HIV-infected children in another study(Reference Ellaurie, Burns and Rubinstein35). A recently published meta-analysis has shown an association between Hb levels and mortality among antiretroviral-naïve HIV-infected children(36). The children in our study were of a younger age group than those in the two studies mentioned. The study from Uganda reported the association between one measure of Hb and mortality whereas our study captured Hb levels over a longer period of time by using multiple measurements available for each child from birth to 2 years of age. Two separate Fe and folic acid supplementation trials were carried out among children aged 1–36 months born to women who were presumably HIV-negative(Reference Sazawal, Black and Ramsan37, Reference Tielsch, Khatry, Stotlzfus, Katz, LeClerq, Adhikari, Mullany, Shresta and Black38). In the trial from Pemba(Reference Sazawal, Black and Ramsan37), adverse events due to malaria-related causes and infection-related causes were increased in the children who received Fe and folic acid supplementation compared with those who received placebo. In the trial from Nepal there was no effect of supplementation on mortality(Reference Tielsch, Khatry, Stotlzfus, Katz, LeClerq, Adhikari, Mullany, Shresta and Black38). The children enrolled in these studies are different from those studied in the present study, which only included children born to HIV-infected women. Moreover, our results are in agreement with those reported among the subgroup of children who had Fe deficiency and anaemia in the Pemba trial, which demonstrated a protective effect of Fe and folic acid supplementation against serious adverse events in that subgroup of children(Reference Sazawal, Black and Ramsan37). Also, in the Nepal trial, there were statistically non-significant reductions in respiratory and diarrhoea morbidity in the group that received Fe and folic acid as compared with placebo(Reference Tielsch, Khatry, Stotlzfus, Katz, LeClerq, Adhikari, Mullany, Shresta and Black38).

There are some potential limitations in our study methodology. Gestational age was determined using maternal recall of last menstrual period, which might not be totally accurate. Due to logistical reasons Hb measurements were done using two different methods – using CBC5 Coulter counter and colorimeter. However, both these methods give comparable results(Reference Pinkerton, Spence, Ogilvie, Ronald, Marchant and Ray39). Biochemical measurements such as serum ferritin would have given a more accurate diagnosis of Fe-deficiency anaemia; however, erythrocyte morphology is also used to make a clinical diagnosis of Fe-deficiency anaemia in the absence of more definitive biochemical measurements(Reference Massawe, Urassa, Mmari, Ronquist, Lindmark and Nystrom40). We did not have detailed information on the diet of the children and the role it may have played in their development of anaemia. However, we controlled for quality of diet using as a proxy indicator, the daily per capita amount of money spent on food.

The results from the present study have important public health implications for countries with a high prevalence of HIV infection and a high burden of anaemia among children. Childhood anaemia is known to be associated with impaired psychomotor and cognitive development(Reference Lozoff, Brittenham, Wolf, McClish, Kuhnert, Jimenez, Jimenez, Mora, Gomez and Krauskoph7, Reference Beard8). The results from our study show that anaemia among children born to HIV-infected women, especially when related to Fe deficiency, is also associated with increased risk of mortality. HIV-exposed children receiving follow-up care within programmes for prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV and paediatric AIDS should receive a comprehensive package of child survival interventions including screening and treatment for anaemia. Assessment of HIV-positive pregnant women for antiretroviral therapy for their own health, including clinical staging of HIV disease and CD4 cell counts, should be scaled up on a priority basis; only about 12 % of HIV-positive pregnant women received this assessment in 2007(41). These interventions, when implemented at scale, can have a significant impact on child survival and development in sub-Saharan Africa.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD R01 32257), the Fogarty International Center (NIH D43 TW00004) and the Harvard School of Public Health. We declare that we have no conflict of interest. A.C. analysed and interpreted the data and wrote the initial draft of the manuscript. R.J.B. provided statistical guidance in data analyses. R.K. assisted in interpretation of the results. D.J.H. assisted in the design of the Tanzania Vitamin Supplementation Trial and in data interpretation. G.I.M. and W.W.F. are principal investigators of the Tanzania Vitamin Supplementation Trial. All co-authors participated in manuscript preparation. We gratefully acknowledge the contributions of the field staff in data collection and the women and children enrolled in the study.

References

1.Ezzati, M, Lopez, AD, Rodgers, A, Vander Hoorn, S & Murray, CJ; Comparative Risk Assessment Collaborating Group (2002) Selected major risk factors and global and regional burden of disease. Lancet 360, 13471360.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2.United Nations Administrative Committee on Coordination, Sub-committee on Nutrition (2000) Fourth Report on the World Nutrition Situation: Nutrition Throughout the Life-cycle. Geneva: UN Press.Google Scholar
3.Belperio, PS & Rhew, DC (2004) Prevalence and outcomes of anemia in individuals with human immunodeficiency virus: a systematic review of the literature. Am J Med 116, Suppl. 7A, 27S43S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4.DeMaeyer, E & Adiels-Tegman, M (1985) The prevalence of anemia in the world. World Health Stat Q 38, 302316.Google ScholarPubMed
5.Stoltzfus, R, Mullany, L & Black, RE (2004) Iron deficiency anemia. In Comparative Quantification of Health Risks: The Global and Regional Burden of Disease due to 25 Selected Major Risk Factors, pp. 163209 [M Ezzati, AD Lopez, A Rodgers and CJL Murray, editors]. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
6.Stoltzfus, RJ & Dreyfus, MJ (1998) Guidelines for the Use of Iron Supplements to Prevent and Treat Iron Deficiency Anemia. Washington, DC: ILSI Press.Google Scholar
7.Lozoff, B, Brittenham, GM, Wolf, AW, McClish, DK, Kuhnert, PM, Jimenez, E, Jimenez, R, Mora, LA, Gomez, I & Krauskoph, D (1987) Iron deficiency anemia and iron therapy effects on infant development test performance. Pediatrics 79, 981985.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
8.Beard, J (2001) Iron biology in immune function, muscle metabolism and neuronal functioning. J Nutr 131, 2 Suppl., 568S580S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9.Chandra, RK (1973) Reduced bactericidal activity of polymorphs in iron deficiency. Arch Dis Child 48, 864867.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
10.Bhaskaram, P & Reddy, V (1975) Cell mediated immunity in iron- and vitamin-deficient children. Br Med J iii, 522524.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
11.Mocroft, A, Kirk, O, Barton, S, Dietrich, M, Proenca, R, Colebunders, R, Pradier, C, dArminio Monforte, A, Ledergerber, B & Lundgren, JD (1999) Anaemia is an independent predictive marker for clinical prognosis in HIV-infected patients from across Europe. EuroSIDA Study Group. AIDS 13, 943950.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
12.O’Brien, ME, Kupka, R, Msamanga, GI, Saathoff, E, Hunter, DJ & Fawzi, WW (2005) Anemia is an independent predictor of mortality and immunologic progression of disease among women with HIV in Tanzania. J Acquir Immun Defic Syndr 40, 219225.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13.Fawzi, WW, Msamanga, GI, Spiegelman, D et al. (1998) Randomised trial of effects of vitamin supplements on pregnancy outcomes and T cell counts in HIV-1-infected women in Tanzania. Lancet 351, 14771482.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14.Lohman, TG, Roche, AF & Martorell, R (editors) (1988) Anthropometric Standardization Reference Manual. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics Publishing.Google Scholar
15.Diggle, P, Liang, K & Zeger, S (1994) Analysis of Longitudinal Data. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
16.Miettinen, OS (1985) Theoretical Epidemiology. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
17.Blanche, S, Rouzioux, C, Moscato, ML et al. (1989) A prospective study of infants born to women seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus type 1. HIV Infection in Newborns French Collaborative Study Group. N Engl J Med 320, 16431648.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
18.Blanche, S, Mayaux, MJ, Rouzioux, C et al. (1994) Relation of the course of HIV infection in children to the severity of the disease in their mothers at delivery. N Engl J Med 330, 308312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19.Lambert, G, Thea, DM, Pliner, V et al. (1997) Effect of maternal CD4+ cell count, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, and viral load on disease progression in infants with perinatally acquired human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection. New York City Perinatal HIV Transmission Collaborative Study Group. J Pediatr 130, 890897.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
20.Abrams, EJ, Wiener, J, Carter, R, Kuhn, L, Palumbo, P, Nesheim, S, Lee, F, Vink, P & Bulterys, M; Perinatal AIDS Collaborative Transmission Study (PACTS) Group (2003) Maternal health factors and early pediatric antiretroviral therapy influence the rate of perinatal HIV-1 disease progression in children. AIDS 17, 867877.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
21.Chearskul, S, Chotpitayasunondh, T, Simonds, RJ et al. .; Bangkok Collaborative Perinatal HIV Transmission Study Group (2002) Survival, disease manifestation and early predictors of disease progression among children with perinatal human immunodeficiency virus infection in Thailand. Pediatrics 110, 2530.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
22.Chatterjee, A, Bosch, RJ, Hunter, DJ, Fataki, MR, Msamanga, GI & Fawzi, WW (2007) Maternal disease stage and child undernutrition in relation to mortality among children born to HIV-infected women in Tanzania. J Acquir Immun Defic Syndr 46, 599606.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
23.Widdowson, EM & Spray, CM (1951) Chemical development in utero. Arch Dis Child 26, 205214.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
24.Singla, PN, Gupta, VK & Agarwal, KN (1985) Storage iron in human fetal organs. Acta Pediatr Scand 74, 701706.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
25.Burnstein, Y, Rashbaum, WK, Hatch, WC, Calvelli, T, Golodner, M, Soeiro, R & Lyman, WD (1992) Alterations in human fetal erythropoiesis are associated with maternal HIV infection. Pediatr Res 32, 155159.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
26.Reed, SC, Wirima, JJ & Stekeete, RW (1994) Risk factors for anemia in young children in rural Malawi. Am J Trop Med Hyg 51, 170174.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
27.Cornet, M, Le Hesran, JY, Fievet, N, Cot, M, Personne, P, Gounoue, R, Beyeme, M & Deloron, P (1998) Prevalence of and risk factors for anemia in young children in southern Cameroon. Am J Trop Med Hyg 58, 606611.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
28.Adewuyi, J & Chitsike, I (1994) Hematologic features of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in black children in Harare. Cent Afr J Med 40, 333336.Google ScholarPubMed
29.Shaffer, N, Hedberg, K, Davachi, F, Lyamba, B, Breman, JG, Masisa, OS, Behets, F, Hightower, A & Nguyen-Dinh, P (1990) Trends and risk factors for HIV-1 seropositivity among outpatient children, Kinshasa, Zaire. AIDS 4, 12311236.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
30.Totin, D, Ndugwa, C, Mmiro, F, Perry, RT, Jackson, JB & Semba, RD (2002) Iron deficiency anemia is highly prevalent among human immunodeficiency virus-infected and uninfected infants in Uganda. J Nutr 132, 423429.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
31.Eley, BS, Sive, AA, Shuttleworth, M & Hussey, GD (2002) A prospective, cross-sectional study of anemia and peripheral iron status in antiretroviral naïve, HIV-infected children in Cape Town, South Africa. BMC Infect Dis 2, 3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
32.Villamor, E, Mbise, R, Spiegelman, D, Ndossi, G & Fazwi, WW (2000) Vitamin A supplementation and other predictors of anemia among children from Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Am J Trop Med Hyg 62, 590597.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
33.Semba, RD & Gray, GE (2001) The pathogenesis of anemia during human immunodeficiency virus infection. J Invest Med 49, 225239.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
34.Clark, TD, Mmiro, F, Ndugwa, C, Perry, RT, Jackson, JB, Melikian, G & Semba, RD (2002) Risk factors and cumulative incidence of anaemia among human immunodeficiency virus-infected children in Uganda. Ann Trop Pediatr 22, 1117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
35.Ellaurie, M, Burns, ER & Rubinstein, M (1990) Hematologic manifestations in pediatric HIV infection: severe anemia as a prognostic factor. Am J Pediatr Hematol Oncol 12, 449453.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
36.Cross Continents Collaborative for Kids (3Cs4kids) Analysis and Writing Committee (2008) Markers for predicting mortality in untreated HIV-infected children in resource-limited settings: a meta-analysis. AIDS 22, 97105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
37.Sazawal, S, Black, RE, Ramsan, M et al. (2006) Effects of routine prophylactic supplementation with iron and folic acid on admission to hospital and mortality in preschool children in a high malaria transmission setting: community-based, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet 367, 133143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
38.Tielsch, JM, Khatry, SK, Stotlzfus, RJ, Katz, J, LeClerq, SC, Adhikari, R, Mullany, LC, Shresta, S & Black, RE (2006) Effect of routine prophylactic supplementation with iron and folic acid on preschool child mortality in southern Nepal: community-based cluster-randomized, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet 367, 144152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
39.Pinkerton, PH, Spence, I, Ogilvie, JC, Ronald, WA, Marchant, P & Ray, PK (1970) An assessment of the Coulter counter model S. J Clin Pathol 23, 6876.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
40.Massawe, SN, Urassa, EN, Mmari, M, Ronquist, G, Lindmark, G & Nystrom, L (1999) The complexity of pregnancy anemia in Dar-es-Salaam. Gynecol Obstet Invest 47, 7682.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
41.World Health Organization/Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS/UNICEF (2008) Towards Universal Access: Scaling Up Priority HIV/AIDS Interventions in the Health Sector: Progress Report 2008. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Maternal and child factors in relation to anaemia (Hb < 8·5 g/dl) among children born to HIV-infected women, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

Figure 1

Table 2 Maternal and child factors in relation to anaemia suggestive of iron deficiency among children born to HIV-infected women, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

Figure 2

Table 3 Association of child anaemia with overall mortality among children born to HIV-infected women, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

Figure 3

Table 4 Association of child anaemia with mortality stratified by HIV status among children born to HIV-infected women, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania