Suppression of Maternal Virus Load With Zidovudine, Didanosine, and Indinavir Combination Therapy Prevents Mother-to-Fetus HIV Transmission in Macaques

Recently, we developed a maternal-fetal macaque model using a highly pathogenic HIV-2 strain, HIV-2287, to study the time course of HIV transmission in utero. Most pregnant macaques (Macaca nemestrina) infected with HIV-2287 (10-10 infective doses) transmitted HIV to their fetuses, as verified by po...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999) 2000-10, Vol.25 (2), p.140-149
Hauptverfasser: Ho, Rodney J. Y, Larsen, Kay, Bui, Tot, Wang, Xiao Y, Herz, Arnd M, Sherbert, Cynthia, Finn, Eric, Nosbisch, Connie, Schmidt, Ann, Anderson, David, Agy, Michael, Morton, William R, Unadkat, Jashvant D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recently, we developed a maternal-fetal macaque model using a highly pathogenic HIV-2 strain, HIV-2287, to study the time course of HIV transmission in utero. Most pregnant macaques (Macaca nemestrina) infected with HIV-2287 (10-10 infective doses) transmitted HIV to their fetuses, as verified by positive identification of virus-infected mononuclear cells and free viral RNA in fetal blood. To determine whether an antiretroviral drug combination therapy composed of two dideoxynucleosides, azidothymidine (15 mg/kg) and dideoxyinosine (15 mg/kg), and a protease inhibitor, indinavir (25 mg/kg), could completely inhibit mother-to-fetus HIV transmission, we administered these drugs orally through gastric catheters to five pregnant macaques infected with 10 infective doses of HIV-2287. Beginning 30 minutes after HIV inoculation, the dams were given the combination antiviral therapy three times daily until delivery by cesarean section. Drug treatment reduced the maternal virus load to a minimally detectable level but did not prevent primary HIV-2287 infection. All fetal and infant blood samples were virus negative by internally controlled RNA polymerase chain reaction (QC-RNA-PCR) and virus coculture assays. Fetal and infant CD4 T-cell levels remained normal throughout the experiment. These findings strongly suggest that combination chemotherapy with azidothymidine, dideoxyinosine, and indinavir can suppress maternal viral load enough to prevent mother-to-fetus transmission of HIV.
ISSN:1525-4135
1944-7884
DOI:10.1097/00126334-200010010-00008