HIV RNA GOOD PRENATAL PREDICTOR
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
LOS ANGELES (3/6/96)-
An HIV-positive mother's level of viral RNA is a
useful predictor of transmission risk to the unborn child, report
researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles,
School of Medicine.
The researchers studied 92 HIV-1 seropositive women (95
pregnancies) and their 97 infants. Forty-two mothers (43
pregnancies) received antiretroviral therapy with zidovudine
during pregnancy and/or during labor and delivery. Eleven
infants received prophylactic zidovudine for the first six weeks
after delivery.
Twenty of the 97 infants in the study were perinatally infected
with HIV-1. Mothers transmitting the virus were much more likely
to have higher HIV RNA levels (50,000 RNA copies/ml or more) than
mothers who did not transmit the virus to their babies. No HIV
transmission occurred when RNA levels were below 20,000/ml.
The study also appears to provide more support for using
zidovudine (formerly known as AZT) in pregnant women to prevent
perinatal transmission. The FDA approved the use of zidovudine
for this indication following definitive results from clinical
trials showing reduced HIV transmission among treated women.
Indeed, in this study, none of the 22 women receiving zidovudine
in an an open-label study transmitted the virus.
The information from this study should help physicians to gauge
the risk of a pregnant woman transmitting HIV to her unborn
child. In addition to zidovudine, the original antiretroviral
drug, several newer agents have also been shown to be beneficial
in the pediatric setting. An increasing amount of data now
suggests that measuring HIV-RNA viral load is the most useful way
to measure whether or not the drugs are working. (See
accompanying article for more info.)
"The results of our study extend recent findings suggesting that
HIV-1 load is an important factor associated with perinatal
transmission. However, given the multifactorial nature of
perinatal HIV-1 transmission, exceptions to these levels will
undoubtedly occur, depending on such variables as viral
phenotype, the presence of chorioamnionitis, the timing of
transmission, the use of antiretroviral therapy in mothers and
infants, and obstetrical and delivery factors," noted Ruth E.
Dickover, Ph.D., from the Department of Pediatrics, UCLA School
of Medicine, Los Angeles, Calif.
The researchers believe zidovudine exert its protective effect by
reducing maternal HIV-1 levels prior to delivery, inhibiting
HIV-1 in blood and secretions and in the fetus during labor and
delivery, and preventing HIV-1 from establishing infection in
the fetus/infant.
"These results strongly suggest that one of the major protective
effects of zidovudine treatment lies in its ability to decrease
maternal HIV-1 levels prior to delivery. This does not rule out
the potential of zidovudine protection of the fetus in utero.
Further studies will be needed to address the role of zidovudine
infusion and/or treatment of the infant following delivery in
preventing late in utero or intrapartum transmission," Dr.
Dickover added.
However, researchers caution that much research is still needed
in this area. None of the HIV RNA quantification assays are yet
licensed for clinical use. Questions also remain about the
reliability of the assays when they are performed under less
stringent conditions by hospital and commercial laboratories.
Also, little is known about how the various different assays and
specimen collection and processing techniques compare. More
information is also required on the fluctuations in HIV RNA
levels over time and under various clinical circumstances and the
impact of HIV-related infections and cancers on viral load.
This research appeared in the Journal of the American MedicalAssociation, Feb. 28, 1996.
Related information on the Internet
JAMA HIV Info.
HIV Replication Primer
Pathogenesis
YAHOO AIDS DIRECTORY
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