Arch Dis Child 1997;77:227-230 ( September )
Impact of HIV on mortality from acute lower respiratory tract
infection in rural Zambia
A Smyth,a
C Y W Tong,b
H Carty,c
C A Hartb
a St
Francis Hospital, Katete, Zambia, b Department of
Medical Microbiology, Royal Liverpool University Hospital, Liverpool, c Royal Liverpool
Children's Hospital Alder Hey, Liverpool
Correspondence to: Dr Alan Smyth, Department of
Paediatrics, Nottingham City Hospital, Hucknall Road, Nottingham
NG5 1PB.
Accepted 11 June 1997
AIMS
To establish the prevalence and clinical
correlates of HIV among children with acute lower respiratory tract infection.
METHODS
Children admitted to a rural
Zambian hospital were studied over an eight month period. The diagnosis
of acute lower respiratory tract infection was made clinically,
according to World Health Organisation (WHO) criteria. Clinicians,
who were unaware of the children's HIV status, prescribed antibiotic
and supportive treatment according to WHO guidelines. HIV status was
established using the polymerase chain reaction (Amplicor HIV1, Roche)
applied to dried blood spots.
RESULTS
Acute lower respiratory tract infection
was diagnosed in 132 children (median age 8 months, range 1 month to 4 years). The WHO criteria for severe or very severe pneumonia were met
by 96/132 patients (73%) and 21 patients (16%) died. HIV dried blood
spot PCR was positive in 14 cases (11%), of whom four fulfilled the WHO clinical case definition for paediatric AIDS and five died. The
group as a whole were malnourished, but the HIV positive children were
more severely malnourished (mean z score for weight =
3.01) than the
HIV negative children (mean z score =
1.73, p < 0.001). The
relative risk of death was 2.6 in the HIV positive group but this was
not significant (p = 0.079).
CONCLUSIONS
An important minority of children with
acute lower respiratory tract infection in rural Zambia will be
infected with HIV. However, most HIV positive children presenting with
respiratory infection will survive given simple antibiotic and
supportive treatment.
Keywords:
HIV;
acute lower respiratory tract infection;
polymerase chain reaction;
malnutrition
© 1997 by Archives of Disease in Childhood