Perinatal Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Pregnant Women with RNA Virus Loads <1000 Copies/mL — John P A Ioannidis (2001) | RDL Network
In a collaboration of 7 European and United States prospective studies, 44 cases of vertical human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transmission were identified among 1202 women with RNA virus loads <1000 copies/mL at delivery or at the measurement closest to delivery. For mothers receiving antiretroviral treatment during pregnancy or at the time of delivery (or both), there was a 1.0% transmission rate (8 of 834; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.4%-1.9%), compared with 9.8% (36 of 368; 95% CI, 7.0%-13.4%) for untreated mothers (risk ratio, 0.10; 95% CI, 0.05-0.21). In multivariate analysis adjusting for study, transmission was lower with antiretroviral treatment (odds ratio [OR], 0.10; P<.001), cesarean section (OR, 0.30; P=.022), greater birth weight (P=.003), and higher CD4 cell count (P=.039). In 12 of 44 cases, multiple RNA measurements were obtained during pregnancy or at the time of delivery or within 4 months after giving birth; in 10 of the 12 cases, the geometric mean virus load was >500 copies/mL. Perinatal HIV-1 transmission occurs in only 1% of treated women with RNA virus loads <1000 copies/mL and may be almost eliminated with antiretroviral prophylaxis accompanied by suppression of maternal viremia.
Anastasia Polycarpou, Christos Ntais, Bette Korber, Henry A. Elrich, Robert Winchester, Paul Krogstad, Steven M. Wolinsky, Timothy Rostron, Sarah Rowland‐Jones, Arthur J. Ammann, John P A Ioannidis
Sara Morón‐López, Víctor Urrea, Judith Dalmau, Miguel López, María C. Puertas, Dan Ouchi, Antonio Gómez, Caroline Passaes, Beatriz Mothe, Christian Brander, Asier Sáez‐Cirión, Bonaventura Clotet, Manel Esteller, María Berdasco, Javier Martínez‐Picado
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