Isoniazid prophylaxis halves risk of death for children with HIV in South Africa

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Isoniazid treatment for prevention of active tuberculosis (TB) in children significantly reduces the risk of death in HIV-positive infants and small children according to results of a South African study presented as a late breaker on the final day of the Fifteenth International AIDS Conference in Bangkok.

The study was conducted in the Western Cape province of South Africa, a region with one of the highest incidences of TB in the world. Children have a 4.1% annualized risk of developing TB in the Western Cape.

Investigators undertook a prospective placebo-controlled trial involving children recruited from two treatment centres in Cape Town. The aim of the study was to see if isoniazid prophylaxis reduced mortality in HIV infected children. A secondary aim of the study was to establish the impact of isoniazid prophylaxis on the incidence of TB.

Glossary

isoniazid

An antibiotic that works by stopping the growth of bacteria. It is used with other medications to treat active tuberculosis (TB) infections, and on its own to prevent active TB in people who may be infected with the bacteria without showing any symptoms (latent TB). 

placebo

A pill or liquid which looks and tastes exactly like a real drug, but contains no active substance.

statistical significance

Statistical tests are used to judge whether the results of a study could be due to chance and would not be confirmed if the study was repeated. If result is probably not due to chance, the results are ‘statistically significant’. 

data safety monitoring board (DSMB)

An independent committee of clinical research experts that reviews data not available to the study team while a clinical trial is in progress to ensure that participants are not exposed to undue risks. A DSMB can recommend that the study be stopped if the intervention is not effective, is causing harm to participants or the study is not likely to serve its scientific purpose. Also known as an Independent Data Monitoring Committee (IDMC).

active TB

Active disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, as evidenced by a confirmatory culture, or, in the absence of culture, suggestive clinical symptoms.

The study recruited HIV-positive children; asymptomatic infants infants below the age of 12 months and symptomatic infants aged 12 months and over. The median age of children enrolled to the study was 23.5 months.

All the children in the study were randomized to receive co-trimoxazole (TMP-SMX) prophylaxis (which is protective against PCP and certain other infections which individuals with immune suppression are vulnerable to) either daily or three times a week. The children in each TMP-SMX group were then randomised to receive either isoniazid prophylaxis or a placebo to be taken at the same dosing frequency as TMP-SMX. Isoniazid (INH) was dosed at 10mg/kg.

Enrollment started in January 2003 with the aim of recruiting 425 patients but the placebo arm of the study was discontinued after the Data Safety Monitoring Board reviewed the findings in May 2004.

By this point there had been a total of 32 deaths: 20 in the placebo group and 12 in the INH group, a statistically significant difference (p = 0.026). Isoniazid treatment was associated with a 53% reduction in mortality.

Survival benefit appeared early during prophylactic treatment with isoniazid (within 50 days), and was apparent in all CDC categories of HIV disease severity and at both treatment centres. Presenting the data, Dr Mark Cotton said he could not explain why isoniazid appeared to have such a rapidly protective effect.

This risk of death was nine times higher in children below the age of eight months when compared to children of 21 months age and over but there was no interaction between age and isoniazid treatment, suggesting that children below the age of 21 months had a higher risk of dying irrespective of which treatment they received.

Isoniazid prophylaxis also helped to prevent cases of tuberculosis. Of the 14 incident cases of tuberculosis which occurred during the study period nine were in the placebo group and five in the isoniazid group. This difference did not, however, reach statistical significance.

References

Zar H et al. Early and unexpected benefit of isoniazid in reducing mortality in HIV-infected children in an area of high tuberculosis prevelance. Fifteenth International AIDS Conference, Bangkok, late breaker abstract LbOrB12, 2004.