Cargando…

Selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in African HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the HIV Prevention Trials Network 024 protocol

BACKGROUND: Reference values for hematological and biochemical assays in pregnant women and in newborn infants are based primarily on Caucasian populations. Normative data are limited for populations in sub-Saharan Africa, especially comparing women with and without HIV infection, and comparing infa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mwinga, Kasonde, Vermund, Sten H, Chen, Ying Q, Mwatha, Anthony, Read, Jennifer S, Urassa, Willy, Carpenetti, Nicole, Valentine, Megan, Goldenberg, Robert L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2746190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19664210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-9-49
_version_ 1782172020155351040
author Mwinga, Kasonde
Vermund, Sten H
Chen, Ying Q
Mwatha, Anthony
Read, Jennifer S
Urassa, Willy
Carpenetti, Nicole
Valentine, Megan
Goldenberg, Robert L
author_facet Mwinga, Kasonde
Vermund, Sten H
Chen, Ying Q
Mwatha, Anthony
Read, Jennifer S
Urassa, Willy
Carpenetti, Nicole
Valentine, Megan
Goldenberg, Robert L
author_sort Mwinga, Kasonde
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Reference values for hematological and biochemical assays in pregnant women and in newborn infants are based primarily on Caucasian populations. Normative data are limited for populations in sub-Saharan Africa, especially comparing women with and without HIV infection, and comparing infants with and without HIV infection or HIV exposure. METHODS: We determined HIV status and selected hematological and biochemical measurements in women at 20–24 weeks and at 36 weeks gestation, and in infants at birth and 4–6 weeks of age. All were recruited within a randomized clinical trial of antibiotics to prevent chorioamnionitis-associated mother-to-child transmission of HIV (HPTN024). We report nearly complete laboratory data on 2,292 HIV-infected and 367 HIV-uninfected pregnant African women who were representative of the public clinics from which the women were recruited. Nearly all the HIV-infected mothers received nevirapine prophylaxis at the time of labor, as did their infants after birth (always within 72 hours of birth, but typically within just a few hours at the four study sites in Malawi (2 sites), Tanzania, and Zambia. RESULTS: HIV-infected pregnant women had lower red blood cell counts, hemoglobin, hematocrit, and white blood cell counts than HIV-uninfected women. Platelet and monocyte counts were higher among HIV-infected women at both time points. At the 4–6-week visit, HIV-infected infants had lower hemoglobin, hematocrit and white blood cell counts than uninfected infants. Platelet counts were lower in HIV-infected infants than HIV-uninfected infants, both at birth and at 4–6 weeks of age. At 4–6 weeks, HIV-infected infants had higher alanine aminotransferase measures than uninfected infants. CONCLUSION: Normative data in pregnant African women and their newborn infants are needed to guide the large-scale HIV care and treatment programs being scaled up throughout the continent. These laboratory measures will help interpret clinical data and assist in patient monitoring in a sub-Saharan Africa context. TRIAL REGISTRATION: nicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT00021671.
format Text
id pubmed-2746190
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27461902009-09-18 Selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in African HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the HIV Prevention Trials Network 024 protocol Mwinga, Kasonde Vermund, Sten H Chen, Ying Q Mwatha, Anthony Read, Jennifer S Urassa, Willy Carpenetti, Nicole Valentine, Megan Goldenberg, Robert L BMC Pediatr Research Article BACKGROUND: Reference values for hematological and biochemical assays in pregnant women and in newborn infants are based primarily on Caucasian populations. Normative data are limited for populations in sub-Saharan Africa, especially comparing women with and without HIV infection, and comparing infants with and without HIV infection or HIV exposure. METHODS: We determined HIV status and selected hematological and biochemical measurements in women at 20–24 weeks and at 36 weeks gestation, and in infants at birth and 4–6 weeks of age. All were recruited within a randomized clinical trial of antibiotics to prevent chorioamnionitis-associated mother-to-child transmission of HIV (HPTN024). We report nearly complete laboratory data on 2,292 HIV-infected and 367 HIV-uninfected pregnant African women who were representative of the public clinics from which the women were recruited. Nearly all the HIV-infected mothers received nevirapine prophylaxis at the time of labor, as did their infants after birth (always within 72 hours of birth, but typically within just a few hours at the four study sites in Malawi (2 sites), Tanzania, and Zambia. RESULTS: HIV-infected pregnant women had lower red blood cell counts, hemoglobin, hematocrit, and white blood cell counts than HIV-uninfected women. Platelet and monocyte counts were higher among HIV-infected women at both time points. At the 4–6-week visit, HIV-infected infants had lower hemoglobin, hematocrit and white blood cell counts than uninfected infants. Platelet counts were lower in HIV-infected infants than HIV-uninfected infants, both at birth and at 4–6 weeks of age. At 4–6 weeks, HIV-infected infants had higher alanine aminotransferase measures than uninfected infants. CONCLUSION: Normative data in pregnant African women and their newborn infants are needed to guide the large-scale HIV care and treatment programs being scaled up throughout the continent. These laboratory measures will help interpret clinical data and assist in patient monitoring in a sub-Saharan Africa context. TRIAL REGISTRATION: nicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT00021671. BioMed Central 2009-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC2746190/ /pubmed/19664210 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-9-49 Text en Copyright © 2009 Mwinga et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mwinga, Kasonde
Vermund, Sten H
Chen, Ying Q
Mwatha, Anthony
Read, Jennifer S
Urassa, Willy
Carpenetti, Nicole
Valentine, Megan
Goldenberg, Robert L
Selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in African HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the HIV Prevention Trials Network 024 protocol
title Selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in African HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the HIV Prevention Trials Network 024 protocol
title_full Selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in African HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the HIV Prevention Trials Network 024 protocol
title_fullStr Selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in African HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the HIV Prevention Trials Network 024 protocol
title_full_unstemmed Selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in African HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the HIV Prevention Trials Network 024 protocol
title_short Selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in African HIV-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the HIV Prevention Trials Network 024 protocol
title_sort selected hematologic and biochemical measurements in african hiv-infected and uninfected pregnant women and their infants: the hiv prevention trials network 024 protocol
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2746190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19664210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-9-49
work_keys_str_mv AT mwingakasonde selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol
AT vermundstenh selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol
AT chenyingq selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol
AT mwathaanthony selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol
AT readjennifers selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol
AT urassawilly selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol
AT carpenettinicole selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol
AT valentinemegan selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol
AT goldenbergrobertl selectedhematologicandbiochemicalmeasurementsinafricanhivinfectedanduninfectedpregnantwomenandtheirinfantsthehivpreventiontrialsnetwork024protocol