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Vertical transmission of toxoplasma by human immunodeficiency virus–infected women - 10/09/11

Doi : 10.1016/S0002-9378(97)70547-7 
Howard Minkoff, MDa, Jack S. Remington, MDc, Susan Holman, RN, MSa, Raymund Ramirezc, Susan Goodwin, RN, MSNd, Sheldon Landesman, MDb
Brooklyn, New York, Palo Alto and Stanford, California, and Rockville, Maryland 

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Our goal was to determine the frequency of mother-to-child transmission of Toxoplasma gondii from human immunodeficiency virus–infected mothers who are also chronically infected with T. gondii.

STUDY DESIGN: One hundred thirty-eight women were entered into a prospective study of human immunodeficiency virus infection in pregnancy. The women were seen at enrollment, during the third, sixth, and eighth months of pregnancy (except those enrolled later in pregnancy or at delivery), at 2 and 6 months post partum, and at 6-month intervals thereafter through 4 years after delivery. Standardized interviews and physical examinations were performed, and blood was drawn at each visit. Toxoplasma serologic testing was performed on the sample drawn earliest in pregnancy; the Sabin-Feldman dye test for immunoglobulin G antibodies and enzyme-linked immunoassays for immunoglobulins M, A, and E were used. Univariate analysis for categoric variables was performed with χ2and two-tailed Fisher exact tests, and for continuous variables the Student t test was used. Statistical Analysis System procedures were followed.

RESULTS: Twenty-eight of 138 (20.2%) women who had positive test results for human immunodeficiency virus had positive findings of the Sabin-Feldman dye test. Serologic status for T. gondii did not correlate with age, immune status, parity, or drug use. One of 27 children born to women who were seropositive for both human immunodeficiency virus and T. gondii (one child's serologic status for T. gondii was unknown) had Sabin-Feldman dye test antibodies beyond age 6 months (3.7%, 95% confidence interval 0.09% to 18.9%). Among the cohort of human immunodeficiency virus–infected mothers the rate of mother-to-child human immunodeficiency virus transmission did not vary with maternal Toxoplasma status. However, with sample sizes of 28 and 110, respectively, for the mothers who were T. gondii seropositive and seronegative, the power to detect a difference in the human immunodeficiency virus transmission rate between these groups would be relatively small.

CONCLUSIONS: Transmission of T. gondii from a chronically infected mother can occur in the setting of a human immunodeficiency virus infection, but this is not a common phenomenon. In a small cohort of human immunodeficiency virus–infected women we did not observe its occurrence among those without severe immunocompromise.(Am J Obstet Gynecol 1997;167:555-9.)

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Keywords : Human immunodeficiency virus, Toxoplasma gondii, toxoplasmosis, perinatal transmission


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 From the Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecologya and Internal Medicine,b State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn, the Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Palo Alto Medical Foundation and Stanford University School of Medicine,c and Westat Inc.d
 Supported by grant RO-1-HD-25714 and contract NO-1-HD-82913 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and contract NO-1-CP-61013 from the National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland.
 Reprint requests: Howard Minkoff, MD, SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn, 450 Clarkson Ave., Box 24, Brooklyn, NY 11203.
 0002-9378/97 $5.00 + 0 6/6/79058


© 1997  Mosby, Inc. Tous droits réservés.
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Vol 176 - N° 3

P. 555-559 - mars 1997 Retour au numéro
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