Prevalence of lipodystrophy in HlV-infected children in Tanzania on HAART

Citation: 
Grace D. Kinabo Mirte Sprengers Levina J. Msuya Aisa M. Shayo Henri van Asten Wil M.V. Dolmans Andre J.A.M van der Ven Adilia Warris
Publication year: 
2021

Objective

Highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) has been associated with lipodystrophy (LD) in adults but data are more limited for children. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of and risk factors for LD in Tanzanian children receiving HAART by clinical assessment and to compare the results with anthropometric data.

Design and Methods

A cross-sectional study was performed in a cohort of HlV-infected children 1-18 years of age receiving HAART in a single center in Moshi, Tanzania. Age, gender, past and current medication regimens and anthropometric measurements were recorded. A clinical scoring method was used to assess LD. Backward binary multivariate logistic regression was used to determine relationships between anthropometric measurements and the presence of clinical LD

Results

Among 210 HlV-infected children, the overall prevalence of LD was 30% [95% Cl: 23.8- 36.2], 19% [95% Cl: 13.7-24.3] for lipoatrophy only, 3.8% [95% Cl: 1.2-6.4] for lipohypertrophy only, and 7.1% [95% Cl: 3.6-10.6] for the mixed type. Most cases were mild. Older age and use of stavudine increased the risk of LD. Overall the study population was stunted but not underweight. In children with relatively lower weight-for-height (WHZ<1), only the mid-upper arm circumference was found to be associated with lipoatrophy, while nearly all anthropometric measurements were associated with lipoatrophy in the well-nourished (WHZ>1) children.

Conclusion

Ourfindings demonstrate that LD is a significant problem among Tanzanian HlV-infected children receiving HAART. Anthropometric measurements predicted LD in well nourished children but generally failed to do so in relatively wasted children. Our findings support current efforts to avoid stavudine use in children.