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The Body Covers: The 35th Annual Meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America
Molecular ZDV Resistance and the Risk of Perinatal HIV-1 Transmission in the Women and Infants Transmission Study
September 1997 Dr. Seth Welles of the University of Minnesota, and his collaborators on
the Women-Infant Transmission Study (WITS) presented data on the viral
isolates from 136 women who were treated with AZT during pregnancy to
estimate the frequency of developing HIV resistance mutations and
transmitting resistant virus to their offspring. About a third of the women
had been on AZT prior to pregnancy, the median CD4 count for the group was
315 cells/ml3, and the median viral load was 24,800 RNA copies/ml. 25% had
at least one AZT resistance mutation, which was asssociated with having a
lower CD4 cell count or %, or higher peripheral viral load at the time of
delivery. Multivariate analysis suggested that having a reverse
transcriptase enzyme mutation, prolonged rupture of the membranes, or a
higher peripheral blood lymphocyte count were each independently associated
with maternal transmission of HIV. The mother's viral load or CD4 count
during pregnancy were not associated with HIV transmission. These findings
suggest that in women with prior AZT experience who develop resistant
strains and become pregnant and continue AZT monotherapy, the risk of
transmitting HIV to their offspring is particularly high. The risk of
transmitting HIV was not associated with HIV-related immunosuppression in
this study.
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