1. Transmission of nevirapine-resistant HIV type 1 via breast milk to infants after single-dose nevirapine in Beira, Mozambique.
- Author
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Micek MA, Dross S, Blanco AJ, Beck IA, Matunha L, Seidel K, Montoya P, Matediana E, Gantt S, Gloyd S, and Frenkel L
- Subjects
- Anti-HIV Agents administration & dosage, Anti-HIV Agents adverse effects, Breast Feeding adverse effects, Drug Resistance, Viral, Female, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections virology, Humans, Mozambique, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious virology, Prospective Studies, HIV Infections transmission, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Milk, Human virology, Nevirapine administration & dosage, Nevirapine adverse effects
- Abstract
Acquisition of nevirapine (NVP)-resistant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) by breast-feeding infants after receipt of single-dose NVP to prevent mother-to-child transmission is not well defined. A prospective observational study of 307 infants evaluated the rate of breast milk transmission of NVP-resistant HIV and the concentrations of mutants over time. NVP resistance was detected in 9 of 24 infants (37.5%; 95% confidence interval, 18.8%-59.4%) infected via breast milk. Eight had a pure mutant HIV population at the time infection was first detected, and majority mutant populations persisted in all 6 infants with follow-up specimens. Infection of breast-feeding infants with NVP-resistant HIV resulted in mutants persisting as the dominant virus, which may indefinitely compromise treatment with NVP-based antiretroviral regimens., (© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2014
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