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      Children born to women with HIV-1 infection: natural history and risk of transmission

      The Lancet
      Elsevier BV

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          Perinatal transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 to infants of seropositive women in Zaire.

          To examine perinatal transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in Zaire, we screened 8108 women who gave birth at one of two Kinshasa hospitals that serve populations of markedly different socioeconomic status. For up to one year, we followed the 475 infants of the 466 seropositive women (5.8 percent of those screened) and the 616 infants of 606 seronegative women matched for age, parity, and hospital. On the basis of clinical criteria, 85 of the seropositive women (18 percent) had the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The infants of seropositive mothers, as compared with those of seronegative mothers, were more frequently premature, had lower birth weights, and had a higher death rate in the first 28 days (6.2 vs. 1.2 percent; P less than 0.0001). The patterns were similar at the two hospitals. Twenty-one percent of the cultures for HIV-1 of 92 randomly selected cord-blood samples from infants of seropositive women were positive. T4-cell counts were performed in 37 seropositive women, and cord blood from their infants was cultured. The cultures were positive in the infants of 6 of the 18 women with antepartum T4 counts of 400 or fewer cells per cubic millimeter, as compared with none of the infants of the 19 women with more than 400 T4 cells per cubic millimeter (P = 0.02). One year later, 21 percent of the infants of the seropositive mothers had died as compared with 3.8 percent of the control infants (P less than 0.001), and 7.9 percent of their surviving infants had AIDS. We conclude that the mortality rates among children of seropositive mothers are high regardless of socioeconomic status, and that perinatal transmission of HIV-1 has a major adverse effect on infant survival in Kinshasa.
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            A prospective study of infants born to women seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus type 1. HIV Infection in Newborns French Collaborative Study Group.

            Assessment of the risks of transmission of infection with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) from mother to newborn is difficult, partly because of the persistence for up to a year of maternal antibodies transmitted passively to the infant. To determine the frequency of perinatal transmission of HIV infection, we studied from birth 308 infants born to seropositive women, 62 percent of whom were intravenous drug abusers. Of 117 infants evaluated 18 months after birth, 32 (27 percent) were seropositive for HIV or had died of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) (n = 6); of the 32, only 2 remained asymptomatic. Another 76 infants (65 percent) were seronegative and free of symptoms, whereas 9 (8 percent) were seronegative but had symptoms suggestive of HIV-1 infection. The infants infected with HIV-1 did not differ from the others at birth with respect to weight, height, head circumference, or rate of malformations, but as compared with newborns who were seronegative at 18 months, their serum IgM levels were higher (78 +/- 81 mg per deciliter vs. 38 +/- 39 mg per deciliter; P less than 0.03) and their CD4 lymphocyte counts were lower (2054 +/- 1221 per cubic millimeter vs. 2901 +/- 1195 per cubic millimeter; P less than 0.006). Neither maternal risk factors nor the route of delivery was a predictor of seropositivity at 18 months; however, 5 of the 6 infants who were breast-fed became seropositive, as compared with 25 of 99 who were not (P less than 0.01). We conclude that approximately one third of the infants born to seropositive mothers will have evidence of HIV-1 infection or of AIDS by the age of 18 months, and that about one fifth of this group will have died.
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              Survival in children with perinatally acquired human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection.

              We describe our experience at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, Florida, with 172 children who were given diagnoses of perinatally acquired infection with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). The 146 mothers of the children acquired HIV-1 through heterosexual contact (69 percent), intravenous drug use (30 percent), or blood transfusion (1 percent). The children presented with symptomatic disease at a median age of eight months; only 21 percent presented after the age of two years. The most common first manifestations of disease were lymphoid interstitial pneumonia (in 17 percent), encephalopathy (in 12 percent), recurrent bacterial infections (in 10 percent), and candida esophagitis (in 8 percent), for which the median survival times from diagnosis were 72, 11, 50, and 12 months, respectively. Nine percent of the children had Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia at a median age of five months and had a median survival of only one month. The median survival for all 172 children was 38 months from the time of diagnosis. Mortality was highest in the first year of life (17 percent), and by proportional-hazard analysis the probability of long-term survival is low. In multivariate analyses, early age at diagnosis and the first identifiable pattern of clinical disease were found to be independently related to survival. We conclude that children with perinatally acquired HIV-1 infection have a very poor prognosis and that most become symptomatic before one year of age. Early diagnosis is important, since there is only a short interval in which to initiate prophylactic or antiviral treatment before progressive disease begins.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Lancet
                The Lancet
                Elsevier BV
                01406736
                February 1991
                February 1991
                : 337
                : 8736
                : 253-260
                Article
                10.1016/0140-6736(91)90866-N
                1671109
                5c9f81d2-5cd4-4aa2-a087-556706482cb8
                © 1991

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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