Publication | Open Access
CMV acquisition and inflammation in HIV-exposed uninfected Zimbabwean infants
12
Citations
10
References
2016
Year
Primary ImmunodeficiencyMaternal ImmunizationHuman RetrovirusImmunologyPediatricsClinical EpidemiologyVirologyEarly LifeChronic Viral InfectionHivHigher Cmv LoadsMedicineAids PathogenesisCmv Acquisition
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) acquisition and inflammation were evaluated in 231 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-exposed uninfected (HEU) and 100 HIV-unexposed Zimbabwean infants aged 6 weeks. The HEU and HIV-unexposed infants had a similarly high prevalence of CMV (81.4% vs 74.0%, respectively; P = .14), but HEU infants had higher CMV loads (P = .005) and >2-fold higher C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations (P < .0001). The CMV-positive HEU infants had higher CRP than the CMV-negative HEU infants; this association disappeared after adjusting for maternal HIV load. Overall, CMV acquisition is high in early life, but HEU infants have higher CMV loads and a proinflammatory milieu, which may be driven partly by maternal HIV viremia.
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