Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2012;7(6):e38622. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038622. Epub 2012 Jun 12.
Herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) suppression has been shown to reduce HIV-1 disease progression in non-pregnant women and men, but effects on pregnant and postpartum women have not been described.
We analyzed data from a cohort of Kenyan women participating in a randomized clinical trial of HSV-2 suppression. Pregnant HIV-1-seropositive, HSV-2-seropositive women who were not eligible for antiretroviral therapy (WHO stage 1-2, CD4>250 cells/µl) were randomized to either 500 mg valacyclovir or placebo twice daily from 34 weeks gestation through 12 months postpartum. Women received zidovudine and single-dose nevirapine for prevention of mother-to-child HIV-1 transmission. HIV-1 progression markers, including CD4 count and plasma HIV-1 RNA levels, were measured serially. Multivariate linear regression was used to compare progression markers between study arms.
Of 148 women randomized, 136 (92%) completed 12 months of postpartum follow-up. While adjusted mean CD4 count at 12 months (565 cells/µl placebo arm, 638 cells/µl valacyclovir arm) increased from antenatal levels in both arms, the mean CD4 count increase was 73 cells/µl higher in the valacyclovir arm than placebo arm (p = 0.03). Mean increase in CD4 count was 154 cells/µl in the valacyclovir arm, almost double the increase of 78 cells/µl in the placebo arm. At 12 months, adjusted HIV-1 RNA levels in the placebo arm increased by 0.66 log(10) copies/ml from baseline, and increased by only 0.21 log(10) copies/ml in the valacyclovir arm (0.40 log(10) copies/ml difference, p = 0.001).
Women randomized to valacyclovir suppressive therapy during pregnancy and postpartum had greater increases in CD4 counts and smaller increases in plasma HIV-1 RNA levels than women in the placebo arm. Valacyclovir suppression during pregnancy and breastfeeding may improve outcomes and delay antiretroviral therapy for HIV-1/HSV-2 co-infected women.
单纯疱疹病毒 2 型(HSV-2)的抑制已被证明可降低非孕妇和男性中的 HIV-1 疾病进展,但对孕妇和产后妇女的影响尚未描述。
我们分析了参加肯尼亚妇女队列研究的随机临床试验数据,这些妇女感染了 HIV-1,且 HSV-2 呈阳性,不符合抗逆转录病毒治疗条件(世界卫生组织分期 1-2 期,CD4>250 个细胞/µl),她们从妊娠 34 周开始至产后 12 个月每天服用两次 500 毫克伐昔洛韦或安慰剂。所有妇女均接受齐多夫定和单剂量奈韦拉平预防母婴 HIV-1 传播。连续检测 HIV-1 进展标志物,包括 CD4 计数和血浆 HIV-1 RNA 水平。使用多变量线性回归比较研究臂之间的进展标志物。
在 148 名随机分配的妇女中,有 136 名(92%)完成了产后 12 个月的随访。虽然两个臂在产后 12 个月时的平均 CD4 计数(安慰剂臂为 565 个细胞/µl,伐昔洛韦臂为 638 个细胞/µl)均从产前水平增加,但伐昔洛韦臂的平均 CD4 计数增加了 73 个细胞/µl,高于安慰剂臂(p=0.03)。伐昔洛韦臂的 CD4 计数平均增加 154 个细胞/µl,几乎是安慰剂臂的 78 个细胞/µl 的两倍。在 12 个月时,安慰剂臂的调整后 HIV-1 RNA 水平比基线增加了 0.66 log(10)拷贝/ml,而伐昔洛韦臂仅增加了 0.21 log(10)拷贝/ml(相差 0.40 log(10)拷贝/ml,p=0.001)。
与安慰剂臂相比,在妊娠和产后期间接受伐昔洛韦抑制治疗的妇女的 CD4 计数增加更多,血浆 HIV-1 RNA 水平增加更小。在 HIV-1/HSV-2 合并感染的妇女中,妊娠和哺乳期的伐昔洛韦抑制可能会改善结局并延迟抗逆转录病毒治疗。