Sustained aviremia despite anti-retroviral therapy non-adherence in male children after in utero HIV transmission
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Published:2024-06-06
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ISSN:1078-8956
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Container-title:Nature Medicine
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Med
Author:
Bengu Nomonde, Cromhout GabrielaORCID, Adland Emily, Govender Katya, Herbert NicholasORCID, Lim Nicholas, Fillis Rowena, Sprenger Kenneth, Vieira Vinicius, Kannie Samantha, van Lobenstein Jeroen, Chinniah Kogielambal, Kapongo Constant, Bhoola Roopesh, Krishna Malini, Mchunu Noxolo, Pascucci Giuseppe RubensORCID, Cotugno Nicola, Palma PaoloORCID, Tagarro Alfredo, Rojo PabloORCID, Roider JuliaORCID, Garcia-Guerrero Maria C., Ochsenbauer ChristinaORCID, Groll AndreasORCID, Reddy Kavidha, Giaquinto Carlo, Rossi Paolo, Hong Seohyun, Dong KristaORCID, Ansari M. Azim, Puertas Maria C.ORCID, Ndung’u Thumbi, Capparelli Edmund, Lichterfeld MathiasORCID, Martinez-Picado JavierORCID, Kappes John C., Archary Moherndran, Goulder PhilipORCID
Abstract
AbstractAfter sporadic reports of post-treatment control of HIV in children who initiated combination anti-retroviral therapy (cART) early, we prospectively studied 284 very-early-cART-treated children from KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, after vertical HIV transmission to assess control of viremia. Eighty-four percent of the children achieved aviremia on cART, but aviremia persisting to 36 or more months was observed in only 32%. We observed that male infants have lower baseline plasma viral loads (P = 0.01). Unexpectedly, a subset (n = 5) of males maintained aviremia despite unscheduled complete discontinuation of cART lasting 3–10 months (n = 4) or intermittent cART adherence during 17-month loss to follow-up (n = 1). We further observed, in vertically transmitted viruses, a negative correlation between type I interferon (IFN-I) resistance and viral replication capacity (VRC) (P < 0.0001) that was markedly stronger for males than for females (r = −0.51 versus r = −0.07 for IFN-α). Although viruses transmitted to male fetuses were more IFN-I sensitive and of higher VRC than those transmitted to females in the full cohort (P < 0.0001 and P = 0.0003, respectively), the viruses transmitted to the five males maintaining cART-free aviremia had significantly lower replication capacity (P < 0.0001). These data suggest that viremic control can occur in some infants with in utero–acquired HIV infection after early cART initiation and may be associated with innate immune sex differences.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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