HIV DNA BLOOD-LEVELS IN VERTICALLY INFECTED PEDIATRIC-PATIENTS - VARIATIONS WITH AGE, ASSOCIATION WITH DISEASE PROGRESSION, AND COMPARISON WITH BLOOD-LEVELS IN INFECTED MOTHERS

Citation
Cd. Brandt et al., HIV DNA BLOOD-LEVELS IN VERTICALLY INFECTED PEDIATRIC-PATIENTS - VARIATIONS WITH AGE, ASSOCIATION WITH DISEASE PROGRESSION, AND COMPARISON WITH BLOOD-LEVELS IN INFECTED MOTHERS, Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes and human retrovirology, 13(3), 1996, pp. 254-261
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Immunology,"Infectious Diseases
ISSN journal
10779450
Volume
13
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
254 - 261
Database
ISI
SICI code
1077-9450(1996)13:3<254:HDBIVI>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
Blood levels of HIV DNA in our vertically infected pediatric patients typically followed a characteristic age-related pattern: continuously increasing with increasing age to a peak between ages 4 and 8 months, and thereafter rather steadily declining. Median HIV DNA levels peaked about 3 months earlier in children who by age 24 months developed mor e severe rather than less severe HIV disease. Children at particular r isk of developing severe HIV disease by age 24 months commonly had >80 0 HIV DNA copies per 0.1 mi of blood at age 3 weeks to 2 months, >1,00 0 copies at 2 to 4 months, and >2,500 copies at ages 4 to 6 months. Ne ar the time of delivery, mothers who transmitted HIV had significantly higher median blood levels of HIV DNA than mothers who did not transm it, but median HIV DNA levels in infected mothers as a group were low compared with those in pediatric patients st month of age.