• DNDi_Logo_No-Tagline_Full Colour
  • Our work
    • Diseases
      • Sleeping sickness
      • Visceral leishmaniasis
      • Cutaneous leishmaniasis
      • Chagas disease
      • Filaria: river blindness
      • Mycetoma
      • Dengue
      • Paediatric HIV
      • Cryptococcal meningitis
      • Hepatitis C
      • Pandemic preparedness
      • Antimicrobial resistance
    • Research & development
      • R&D portfolio & list of projects
      • Drug discovery
      • Translational research
      • Clinical trials
      • Registration & access
      • Treatments delivered
    • Advocacy
      • Open and collaborative R&D
      • Transparency of R&D costs
      • Pro-access policies and IP
      • Children’s health
      • Gender equity
      • Climate change
      • AI and new technologies
  • Networks & partners
    • Partnerships
      • Our partners
      • Partnering with us
    • Global networks
      • Chagas Platform
      • Dengue Alliance
      • HAT Platform
      • LEAP Platform
      • redeLEISH Network
    • DNDi worldwide
      • DNDi Switzerland
      • DNDi DRC
      • DNDi Eastern Africa
      • DNDi Japan
      • DNDi Latin America
      • DNDi North America
      • DNDi South Asia
      • DNDi South-East Asia
  • News & resources
    • News & stories
      • News
      • Stories
      • Statements
      • Viewpoints
      • Social media
      • eNews Newsletter
    • Press
      • Press releases
      • In the media
      • Podcasts, radio & TV
      • Media workshops
    • Resources
      • Scientific articles
      • Our publications
      • Videos
    • Events
  • About us
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Our story
      • How we work
      • Our strategy
      • Our donors
      • Annual reports
      • Our prizes and awards
    • Our people
      • Our leadership
      • Our governance
      • Contact us
    • Work with us
      • Working at DNDi
      • Job opportunities
      • Requests for proposal
  • Donate
  • DNDi_Logo_No-Tagline_Full Colour
  • Our work
    • Diseases
      • Sleeping sickness
      • Visceral leishmaniasis
      • Cutaneous leishmaniasis
      • Chagas disease
      • Filaria: river blindness
      • Mycetoma
      • Dengue
      • Paediatric HIV
      • Cryptococcal meningitis
      • Hepatitis C
      • Pandemic preparedness
      • Antimicrobial resistance
    • Research & development
      • R&D portfolio & list of projects
      • Drug discovery
      • Translational research
      • Clinical trials
      • Registration & access
      • Treatments delivered
    • Advocacy
      • Open and collaborative R&D
      • Transparency of R&D costs
      • Pro-access policies and IP
      • Children’s health
      • Gender equity
      • Climate change
      • AI and new technologies
  • Networks & partners
    • Partnerships
      • Our partners
      • Partnering with us
    • Global networks
      • Chagas Platform
      • Dengue Alliance
      • HAT Platform
      • LEAP Platform
      • redeLEISH Network
    • DNDi worldwide
      • DNDi Switzerland
      • DNDi DRC
      • DNDi Eastern Africa
      • DNDi Japan
      • DNDi Latin America
      • DNDi North America
      • DNDi South Asia
      • DNDi South-East Asia
  • News & resources
    • News & stories
      • News
      • Stories
      • Statements
      • Viewpoints
      • Social media
      • eNews Newsletter
    • Press
      • Press releases
      • In the media
      • Podcasts, radio & TV
      • Media workshops
    • Resources
      • Scientific articles
      • Our publications
      • Videos
    • Events
  • About us
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Our story
      • How we work
      • Our strategy
      • Our donors
      • Annual reports
      • Our prizes and awards
    • Our people
      • Our leadership
      • Our governance
      • Contact us
    • Work with us
      • Working at DNDi
      • Job opportunities
      • Requests for proposal
  • Donate
Home > Diseases
paediatric-hiv icon

Paediatric HIV

Symptoms, transmission, and current treatments for paediatric HIV

Home > Diseases
paediatric-hiv icon

Paediatric HIV

Symptoms, transmission, and current treatments for paediatric HIV

  • Overview
  • Facts
  • Projects & achievements
  • Target product profile
  • Advocacy toolkit

What is HIV?

The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a virus that weakens the immune system, making the body less able to fight infections and cancers. Without treatment, HIV continues replicating within the body leading to an advanced stage of HIV infection called Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS). At this stage, the body is very vulnerable to infections and cancers that can typically be fought by a healthy immune system, leading to chronic illness and death.

Infants and young children with HIV are particularly vulnerable, with most not surviving to the age of five without treatment. Transmission of the HIV virus from a pregnant mother to a child can be easily prevented with current treatments, but a high number of paediatric infections still occur in some developing countries despite global progress in preventing mother-to-child transmission.

What is the impact of paediatric HIV?

  • 1.4 million children living with HIV
  • 120,000 new HIV cases in children in 2024
  • 84% of children living with HIV in 2024 live in sub-Saharan Africa
  • Only 55% of children with HIV receive treatment – compared to 78% of adults with HIV
  • Without treatment, half of children with HIV will die before turning two
  • Children comprised 3.5% of people living with HIV in 2024 but 12% of AIDS-related deaths

How is HIV in children treated?

At present, HIV cannot be cured, but it can be managed with combinations of antiretroviral drugs. However, due to the relatively low number of children living with HIV compared to adults, research on new HIV medicines specifically for children has been neglected.

The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends first-line treatment for infants and children consisting of dolutegravir (DTG) with two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. It recommends lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) with two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors where DTG cannot be used. Until recently, the only protease inhibitor available for young children was LPV/r, available in a form that was:

  • not child-friendly (the syrup tastes terrible and contains 42% alcohol)
  • not suitable for poor communities because it needs to be stored in a fridge
  • difficult to store and transport.

Together with our partner Cipla, we have developed sweet-tasting, heat-stable, ‘4-in-1’ granules to treat young children, which were first approved by the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA) in 2022 and later by other countries. Carers can give the medicine to children by sprinkling the granules over soft food like porridge or dissolving it in water or milk.

Multiple new child-friendly formulations of WHO-recommended regimens have now been introduced, representing a long-awaited and long overdue treatment revolution for children with HIV.

UNAIDS targets state that 95% of children with known HIV status should be on treatment by 2025. More child-friendly medicines are needed to roll-out treatment to more babies and young children, who are either receiving no treatment or suboptimal treatments. Access is also a problem: only 55% of children with HIV received antiretroviral treatment in 2024.

How do children get HIV?

  • 90% of children with HIV acquired the virus from their mothers during pregnancy, delivery, or through breast-feeding.
  • Effective treatment can prevent HIV transmission from a mother to her child, but not all pregnant women with HIV have access to these treatments.

What is the effect of HIV on children?

Babies with HIV develop the same symptoms as adults, but the disease progresses faster. Symptoms include:

  • slow growth and weight gain
  • severe wasting
  • diarrhoea and upper respiratory tract infections that cause increased medical problems and death
  • infections such as tuberculosis

How is HIV in children diagnosed?

Rapid HIV-antibody tests have made field diagnosis of HIV inexpensive and technically feasible in poor communities.

Last updated: September 2025

‘Taking care of a child with HIV is a heavy burden’

In Senegal, people with HIV are subject to harsh discrimination. As a result, many children living with the disease are not being detected. The Mothers’ Ward at Albert Royer Hospital is a safe place for caregivers & their kids to come and seek treatment.
READ MORE

Making medical history for neglected patients

We develop urgently needed treatments for neglected patients and ensure they’re affordable, available, and adapted to the communities who need them

Young boy sitting on a hospital bed being examined by a nurse

Chagas disease

Causes heart and vital organ damage, after people are bitten by blood-sucking bugs

We delivered the first-ever treatment for children; now we’re searching for new drug candidates and working to boost access to care

Patient medical examination

Cryptococcal meningitis

Without treatment, deadly for thousands of people with advanced HIV

We’re working to improve access to life-saving treatments and developing an easier-to-use formulation

Girl with skin lesions on her nose

Cutaneous leishmaniasis

Leaves disfiguring, life-long scars that lead to severe social stigma

We’re working to develop safer, shorter treatments for this disabling disease

Doctor with young patient in hospital setting

Dengue

Rapidly spreading climate-sensitive disease with no specific treatment

We’re building a global partnership with dengue-endemic countries to develop a first treatment

Father walking in rural village with a cane and holding his son's hand

Filaria: river blindness

Lead to unbearable itching, disfiguring skin lesions, and even blindness

We’re working to develop a safe, effective, and affordable drug for the prevention and treatment of this debilitating disease

Young man standing in the street

Hepatitis C

Millions are left without treatment even though effective drugs exist

We’ve delivered a treatment as simple, safe, and effective as the best drugs available today – at a fraction of the cost 

Woman standing in front of her door house in a rural village in Sudan

Mycetoma

Often ends in amputation​, after people get infected from stepping on a thorn

We conducted the world’s first trial for an alternative to current treatments, which are toxic and difficult to administer

Mother holding her baby in her arms smiling

Paediatric HIV

Without treatment, half of children die before their second birthday

We’ve developed a strawberry-flavoured treatment to meet the needs of children long neglected by the global HIV response

Healthcare workers in a hospital

Pandemic Preparedness

The COVID-19 pandemic intensified global health inequalities

We’re bringing together partners and accelerating research to prepare for future viral pandemics in low-resource settings

Doctor diagnosing a man in a village with his hands on the man's neck

Sleeping sickness

Transmitted by the bite of a tsetse fly and causes severe neurological disorders

We delivered a revolutionary new drug to replace toxic treatments, and have ongoing trials to eliminate this disease

Girl looking over a fence

Visceral leishmaniasis

Is one of the world’s biggest parasitic killers, spread by the bites of sandflies

We’re working to develop a new generation of treatments to replace drugs that are painful, ineffective, and cause side effects

Chagas disease

Cryptococcal meningitis

Cutaneous leishmaniasis

Dengue

Filaria: river blindness

Hepatitis C

Mycetoma

Paediatric HIV

Pandemic Preparedness

Sleeping sickness

Visceral leishmaniasis

VIEW ALL DISEASES

Stay connected

Get our latest news, personal stories, research articles, and job opportunities. 

Linkedin-in Instagram Twitter Facebook-f Youtube
International non-profit developing safe, effective, and affordable treatments for the most neglected patients.

Learn more

  • Diseases
  • Neglected tropical diseases
  • R&D portfolio
  • Policy advocacy

Get in touch

  • Our offices
  • Contact us
  • Integrity Line

Support us

  • Donate
  • Subscribe to eNews

Work with us

  • Join research networks
  • Jobs
  • RFPs
  • Terms of Use   
  •   Acceptable Use Policy   
  •   Privacy Policy   
  •   Cookie Policy   
  •   Our policies   

  • Except for images, films, and trademarks which are subject to DNDi’s Terms of Use, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license