Publication | Open Access
The Amount of Early p24 Antigenemia and Not the Time of First Detection of Virus Predicts the Clinical Outcome of Infants Vertically Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus
10
Citations
19
References
1996
Year
Twenty-three children vertically infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) were studied for viremia during the first days of life. Nine had HIV-1 infection within the first week (early); 14 had HIV-1 first detected by day 11-90 (late). The groups had similar incidence and time of onset of symptomatic HIV-1 infection and survival. CD4 T cell percentages, rates of CD4 T cell attrition, quantitative cell-associated viremia, and p24 antigen concentrations were comparable. Children with peak antigen concentrations >100 pg/mL during the first 6 months (5 early, 6 late) fared worse than those with lower p24 levels. Thus, HIV-1-infected infants with detectable virus in the first few days of life do not have a worse prognosis than infants whose virus is detectable only later. Elevated p24 antigenemia during the first 6 months of life correlates strongly with poor clinical outcome and is independent of the time virus was first detected.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1