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Pediatric Infectious Disease | 1994

Maternal predictors of perinatal human immunodeficiency virus transmission

Pauline A. Thomas; Jeremy Weedon; Keith Krasinski; Elaine J. Abrams; Nathan Shaffer; Pamela B. Matheson; Mahrukh Bamji; Aditya Kaul; David Hutson; Katherine T. Grimm; Sara T. Beatrice; Martha F. Rogers

&NA; This analysis sought to identify characteristics of pregnant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV‐1)‐infected women that predict mother‐to‐child HIV‐1 transmission. Pregnant and immediately postpartum women at risk for HIV were enrolled at obstetric and pediatric care settings in New York City from 1986 to 1992. Demographic and behavioral characteristics, clinical illness, T lymphocyte subsets, immunoglobulin concentration and syphilis serology were collected on the women. Infants were followed to determine HIV infection classification according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention criteria for HIV‐1 in children. Transmission rates were calculated for women who gave birth more than 15 months before the analysis. Of 172 HIV‐1‐infected women with known outcome 49 (28%) had infected infants. The transmission rate (TR) was significantly higher among women with <280 CD4+ cells/&mgr;l (lowest CD4+ quartile) than with CD4+ counts >280 (48% vs. 22%; P = 0.004; odds ratio, 3.4; 95% confidence interval (1.5, 7.8)); a similar trend was seen by CD4+% quartile. No difference in TR was seen comparing women by CD8+ count quartile but marginally higher TR was seen among women with CD8+% ≥51% than with CD8+% <51% (TR = 41% vs. 24%; P = 0.076; odds ratio, 2.2; confidence interval (1.0, 5.1)). The highest TR, 62%, was seen in women with both CD8+ count above the median and CD4+ count in the lowest quartile. No significant difference in TR was seen between women with and without HIV‐related illness, although the TR was 53% among women hospitalized in the previous year for pneumonia compared with 25% in others (P = 0.03). TR was somewhat lower in women who delivered by cesarean section than vaginally (entire cohort: 18% vs. 32%, P = 0.11; prenatal enrollees only, 17% vs. 38%, P = 0.045). No factor or combination of factors was both highly sensitive and specific for predicting mother‐to‐child HIV transmission. A possible relationship between transmission and mode of delivery deserves further investigation.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1996

Cytomegalovirus infection in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected children

Sulachni Chandwani; Aditya Kaul; Donna Bebenroth; Mimi Kim; David Di John; Andre Fidelia; Annette Hassel; William Borkowsky; Keith Krasinski

BACKGROUND Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a frequent opportunistic infection in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected children. The interactions of CMV and HIV-1 in coinfected children are not well-characterized. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the prevalence of asymptomatic CMV infection and symptomatic CMV disease and to assess the influence of CMV on clinical and laboratory markers of HIV disease progression in CMV-coinfected children. METHODS Serial urine CMV cultures were performed on 500 children (131 HIV-1-infected (HIV+), 129 seroreverters born to HIV-infected mothers, and 240 HIV-uninfected (HIV-)). The clinical, immunologic and virologic data of 131 HIV+ children were analyzed. RESULTS CMV was recovered in 40 of 131 HIV+ (31%), 22 of 129 seroreverters (17%) and 30 of 240 HIV- (13%) children. Of the 40 HIV+ children with CMV coinfection, 7 developed symptomatic CMV disease (17.5%) including chorioretinitis (3), colitis (2) and pneumonitis (2). The HIV+ children with symptomatic CMV disease had significantly lower mean CD4+ T lymphocyte proportions (17% vs. 26%; age-adjusted P = 0.013) and greater HIV p24 antigen concentrations (329 pg/ml vs. 57 pg/ml; age-adjusted P = 0.13) than HIV+ children with asymptomatic CMV infection. In a subset of children coinfected with CMV before 6 months of age (n = 11), 5 (45%) developed symptomatic CMV disease, and 4 of these 5 children died within 10 months of diagnosis of CMV disease. At the time of the first positive CMV culture in these children, mean CD4+ T lymphocyte proportions did not differ according to the presence or absence of CMV-related symptoms (symptomatic CMV+, 21% vs. asymptomatic CMV = 38%; P = 0.14). In HIV+ children with symptomatic CMV disease, p24 antigen concentrations were greater than in those with asymptomatic CMV infection (461 vs. 190 pg/ml, P = 0.06). CONCLUSIONS Symptomatic CMV disease occurred in young CMV-coinfected children with low CD4+ lymphocytes and elevated HIV p24 antigen concentrations. Whether progressive immunodeficiency allows the emergence of CMV disease or CMV infection causes more rapidly progressive HIV-1 disease or whether there is a more complex relationship remains to be determined.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1994

Streptococcus pneumoniae in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected children.

Matthew Gesner; Diane Desiderio; Mimi Kim; Aditya Kaul; Robert M. Lawrence; Sulachni Chandwani; Henry Pollack; Mona Rigaud; Keith Krasinski; William Borkowsky

The purpose of this study was to characterize systemic Streptococcus pneumoniae disease in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected children. All cases of bacteremia and meningitis caused by S. pneumoniae among children less than 18 years old were collected by review of the Microbiology Laboratory records at the Bellevue Hospital Center during the period August 1, 1978, through July 31, 1993. There were 31 bouts of systemic S. pneumoniae disease in 19 of 235 HIV-1-infected children cared for by the Pediatric Infectious Disease staff and 116 bouts in 113 children not known to be HIV-1-infected. Four of the 19 HIV-1-infected children had multiple episodes of S. pneumoniae bacteremia as compared with 3 of 113 in the general population (P = 0.008). The frequency of serotypes and distribution of infections by season of the year did not differ between the 2 groups. The median ages at the time of the S. pneumoniae infection were 1.8 and 1.1 years for the HIV-1-infected children and the general population of children, respectively, when those children with multiple episodes were included for their initial episode only (P = 0.06). In the HIV-1-infected patients, 10 episodes were associated with pneumonia, 5 with pneumonia and otitis media, 5 with otitis media only, 1 with pneumonia and meningitis, 1 with meningitis only and 1 with periorbital cellulitis; 5 had no apparent focus of infection. One episode of pneumonia was complicated by lung abscess and there were 2 deaths. Most HIV-1-infected patients recovered without significant sequelae, and the clinical course of their systemic infections did not appear to be markedly different than that of healthy children.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1991

Disseminated fungal infections in children infected with human immunodeficiency virus

Eugene Leibovitz; Mona Rigaud; Sulachni Chandwani; Aditya Kaul; Alba M. Greco; Henry Pollack; Robert Z. Lawrence; David Di John; Bruce A. Hanna; Keith Krasinski; William Borkowsky

&NA; A retrospective review of charts of 156 human immunodeficiency virus‐infected children cared for during a 7.5‐year period revealed 11 episodes of disseminateed candidiasis (DC) occurring in 11 patients (7%). All 11 patients developed the fungal infection in the context of advanced human immunodeficiency virus infection. All but one were hospital‐acquired, occurring at a mean of 2.3 months after admission. Ten patients had been febrile for more than 14 days before diagnosis. Previous oral thrush and central venous catheters (73 and 82% of patients) represented major predisposing factors for development of DC. Neutropenia (2 of 11 patients) did not represent a major risk factor for DC. Candida albicans was isolated in 9 patients, Rhodotorula minuta in 1 patient and 1 fungal isolate could not be identified. Sources of isolation were blood (8 of 11 patients), central venous catheters (3 of 11) and urine (2 of 11). Lungs (6 of 11 patients), esophagus (5 of 11) and brain, heart and kidneys (3 patients each) were the organs most often involved in DC. Antemortem diagnosis was achieved in only 7 (64%) patients; none of the 4 patients with DC diagnosed postmortem had been treated before death. Seven patients were treated with amphotericin B; 6 of them died but only 3 were treated for more than 7 days of therapy. The overall mortality was 90% (10 of 11 patients). In all 20% of the 50 human immunodeficiency virus‐infected children who died at our hospital during the study period had an episode of DC in close proximity to their death. DC was considered the direct cause of death in 4 of 10 children.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2002

Immunoreconstitution in Children Receiving Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy Depends on the CD4 Cell Percentage at Baseline

Divna Nikolic-Djokic; Shaffiq Essajee; Mona Rigaud; Aditya Kaul; Sulachni Chandwani; William Hoover; Robert M. Lawrence; Henry Pollack; Yekaterina Sitnitskaya; Stefan Hagmann; Patrick Jean-Philippe; Song He Chen; Jayme Radding; Keith Krasinski; William Borkowsky

The effect of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in 85 children infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) was compared retrospectively among Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) immunologic groups 1-3. The duration of HAART did not vary significantly among the immunologic groups (median, 39.07 months). The CD4 cell percentage increased in 39.1%, 58.3%, and 90% of patients in CDC groups 1-3, respectively (P <.001). HAART resulted in the suppression of HIV-1 below detectable levels in 34.8%, 25%, and 32% of patients in the 3 CDC groups, respectively, and in a frequent switch from syncytium-inducing to nonsyncytium-inducing virus. Thymic excision circles increased in a subset of patients with increases in CD4 cell percentage independently of HIV RNA level. The results support the option of delaying HAART in early asymptomatic HIV-1 disease in children and the use of other markers of disease progression, in addition to virus load.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1994

Efficacy of primary chemoprophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia during the first year of life in infants infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1

Mona Rigaud; Henry Pollack; Eugene Leibovitz; Kimi Kim; Deborah Persaud; Aditya Kaul; Robert M. Lawrence; David Di John; William Borkowsky; Keith Krasinski

To evaluate the efficacy of primary chemoprophylaxis in preventing Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) in infants with perinatal human immunodeficiency virus-1 infection during the first year of life, we conducted a retrospective chart review of infants with human immunodeficiency virus-1 infection born at New York University Medical Center-Bellevue Hospital Center, in New York. Between March 1989 and March 1993, 24 infants received primary chemoprophylaxis with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole in the first year of life and 24 infants did not receive primary prophylaxis. The CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts in the two groups did not differ during the first year of life. The median age at the time of initiation of prophylaxis was 3 months, and the average duration of prophylaxis was 5.5 months. Among the infants who had not received prophylaxis, five cases of PCP were diagnosed at a median age of 5 months; in contrast, no cases of PCP were observed in the infants receiving prophylaxis (log-rank test, p = 0.017). The probability of surviving after 1 year of age was 92% for the children who received prophylaxis and 74% for those who did not (log-rank test, p = 0.035). These data indicate that chemoprophylaxis is highly effective in preventing primary PCP and improving survival time in infants with human immunodeficiency virus-1 infection.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2004

Correlation between HIV-specific CD8 cell production of interferon-γ and plasma levels of HIV RNA in perinatally infected pediatric populations

William Borkowsky; Ming-Xia Zhan; Song-He Chen; Tiina Ilmet; Aditya Kaul; Sulachni Chandwani; Mona Rigaud; Shaffiq Essajee; Caroline Gruber; Abigail Freedman; Keith Krasinski

BACKGROUND CD8 cell responses to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have been correlated with virus control in adults, and this study outcome has been controversial. Attempts to establish the same correlation in small numbers of children have also been made, with similar controversy resulting. METHODS A total of 110 perinatally infected children were studied. Nine of the children (mean age, 1.9 years vs. 11.8 years for the remaining 101 children) received treatment with antiretrovirals within the first 3 months of life. CD4 cell and HIV RNA levels were measured. Production of interferon- gamma after exposure to recombinant vaccinia vectors was measured by enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay. RESULTS Responses to Pol and Gag antigens exceeded those to Nef and Env antigens, with responses significantly approximated by a quadratic function for which peak responses occurred at plasma HIV RNA levels of 103-104 HIV RNA copies/mL. Children who are treated early in life with highly active antiretroviral therapy have fewer total responses of ELISPOT-forming cells to HIV antigens than do children who are treated later in life.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1993

Cholestatic hepatitis in children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus

Deborah Persaud; Babu S. Bangaru; M. A. Greco; Sharon Nachman; Khush Mittal; Sulachni Chandwani; Keith Krasinski; William Borkowsky; Aditya Kaul

A distinct clinical syndrome of cholestasis and hepatitis occurred during early infancy in seven infants with perinatally acquired human immunodeficiency virus 1 infection. In five infants hepatitis was the first manifestation of human immunodeficiency virus 1 infection. The median age of onset of hepatitis was 7 months (range, 5 to 10 months). The mean total bilirubin concentration at presentation was 7.4 mg/dl (range, 3.9 to 11 mg/dl), the mean aspartate amino-transferase was 1512 IU/liter (range, 782 to 2960 IU/liter) and the mean alanine amino-transferase 512 IU/liter (range, 92 to 1247 IU/liter). The absolute CD4 count at the time of onset of hepatitis ranged from 191 to 2298 cells/mm3 (mean, 766 cells/mm3). Six of the seven children died within 12 weeks of onset of hepatitis, three as a result of complications of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, and two died of complications secondary to cytomegalovirus. In only one infant was the cause of death the direct consequence of liver failure. The seventh infant died 17 months after the onset of hepatitis of dilated cardiomyopathy. No specific etiologic agent has been identified as the cause of cholestatic hepatitis in these infants. In situ hybridization studies to detect human immunodeficiency virus 1 messenger RNA was negative in the liver tissue obtained at biopsy and autopsy in five of the samples tested.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1995

Shortened survival in infants vertically infected with human immunodeficiency virus with elevated p24 antigenemia

Nina Zarudsky Arlievsky; Henry Pollack; Mona Rigaud; Aditya Kaul; Keith Krasinski; William Borkowsky

OBJECTIVE To determine whether the amount of p24 antigenemia in the first 6 months of life is a predictor of survival in children infected vertically with human immunodeficiency virus type 1. METHODS A retrospective study of vertically infected infants and children who were followed prospectively from early infancy and who had quantitation of plasma p24 antigen concentration in the first 6 months of life. Infants were first stratified by duration of survival as infants who died before 2 years of age (short-term survivors) and infants who survived to 2 years of age (intermediate-term survivors). The median p24 antigen concentration and the proportion of infants in each group with high concentrations of antigen were compared. Analyses with and excluding all p24 determinations made after the use of antiretroviral agents were compared Kaplan-Meier product limit analysis was used to compare survival in infants with low and high antigenemia during the first 6 months of life. RESULTS The median p24 antigen concentration in 15 short-term survivors was 228 pg/ml, compared with 14 pg/ml in 26 intermediate-term survivors (p < 0.05). The proportion of children with > 100 pg/ml of p24 was higher in short-term than in intermediate-term survivors (p = 0.01). Survival to 2 years of age in infants in whom all p24 antigen values during the first 6 months of life were 100 pg/ml or less was 91%, in comparison with 39% in infants with values greater than 100 pg/ml (p = 0.0017). CONCLUSIONS Elevated p24 antigenemia in the first 6 months of life is associated with shorter survival and may be a useful predictor of outcome.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1996

Rapid oral desensitization to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole in infants and children

Vincent J. Palusci; Aditya Kaul; Robert M. Lawrence; Kathleen A. Haines; Pamela L. Kwittken

BACKGROUND Although trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is the preferred chemoprophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, there are frequent IgE-mediated reactions among children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Oral desensitization allows more patients to receive chemoprophylaxis, but it has been studied in only a limited number of children. METHODS We desensitized five children infected with the HIV using a rapid, 4-h oral protocol. RESULTS Three children (including two infants) successfully completed desensitization and started maintenance therapy, but the other two experienced reactions that precluded further administration of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. CONCLUSIONS We conclude that a rapid, oral trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole desensitization protocol is safe and, in some instances, effective among HIV-infected children and infants with a history of non-life-threatening, IgE-mediated reactions to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.

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Elaine J. Abrams

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Mahrukh Bamji

Metropolitan Hospital Center

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Nathan Shaffer

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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