Effects of a single large dose of vitamin A, given during the postpartum period to HIV-positive women and their infants, on child HIV infection, HIV-free survival, and …

JH Humphrey, PJ Iliff, ET Marinda… - The Journal of …, 2006 - academic.oup.com
JH Humphrey, PJ Iliff, ET Marinda, K Mutasa, LH Moulton, H Chidawanyika, BJ Ward…
The Journal of infectious diseases, 2006academic.oup.com
Background Low maternal serum retinol level is a risk factor for mother-to-child transmission
(MTCT) of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Multiple-large-dose vitamin A
supplementation of HIV-positive children reduces mortality. The World Health Organization
recommends single-large-dose vitamin A supplementation for postpartum women in areas
of prevalent vitamin A deficiency; neonatal dosing is under consideration. We investigated
the effect that single-large-dose maternal/neonatal vitamin A supplementation has on MTCT …
Abstract
BackgroundLow maternal serum retinol level is a risk factor for mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Multiple-large-dose vitamin A supplementation of HIV-positive children reduces mortality. The World Health Organization recommends single-large-dose vitamin A supplementation for postpartum women in areas of prevalent vitamin A deficiency; neonatal dosing is under consideration. We investigated the effect that single-large-dose maternal/neonatal vitamin A supplementation has on MTCT, HIV-free survival, and mortality in HIV-exposed infants
MethodsA total of 14,110 mother-infant pairs were enrolled ⩽96 h after delivery, and both mother and infant, mother only, infant only, or neither received vitamin A supplementation in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial with a 2×2 factorial design. All but 4 mothers initiated breast-feeding. A total of 4495 infants born to HIV-positive women were included in the present analysis
ResultsNeither maternal nor neonatal vitamin A supplementation significantly affected postnatal MTCT or overall mortality between baseline and 24 months. However, the timing of infant HIV infection modified the effect that supplementation had on mortality. Vitamin A supplementation had no effect in infants who were polymerase chain reaction (PCR) negative for HIV at baseline. In infants who were PCR negative at baseline and PCR positive at 6 weeks, neonatal supplementation reduced mortality by 28% (P=.01), but maternal supplementation had no effect. In infants who were PCR negative at 6 weeks, all 3 vitamin A regimens were associated with ∼2-fold higher mortality (P⩽.05)
ConclusionsTargeted vitamin A supplementation of HIV-positive children prolongs their survival. However, postpartum maternal and neonatal vitamin A supplementation may hasten progression to death in breast-fed children who are PCR negative at 6 weeks. These findings raise concern about universal maternal or neonatal vitamin A supplementation in HIV-endemic areas
Oxford University Press