Journal article
Maternal but Not Infant Anti-HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibody Response Associates with Enhanced Transmission and Infant Morbidity
mBio, Vol.8(5), e01373-17
10/24/2017
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.01373-17
PMCID: PMC5654929
PMID: 29066544
Abstract
A significant number of infants acquire HIV-1 through their infected mother's breast milk, primarily due to limited access to antiretrovirals. Passive immunization with neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) may prevent this transmission. Previous studies, however, have generated conflicting results about the ability of nAbs to halt mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) and their impact on infant outcomes. This study compared plasma neutralizing activity in exposed infants and the infected mothers (
63) against heterologous HIV-1 variants and the quasispecies present in the mother. HIV-exposed uninfected infants (HEU) (
42), compared to those that eventually acquired infection (
21), did not possess higher nAb responses against heterologous envelopes (
= 0.46) or their mothers' variants (
= 0.45). Transmitting compared to nontransmitting mothers, however, had significantly higher plasma neutralizing activity against heterologous envelopes (
= 0.03), although these two groups did not have significant differences in their ability to neutralize autologous strains (
= 0.39). Furthermore, infants born to mothers with greater neutralizing breadth and potency were significantly more likely to have a serious adverse event (
= 0.03). These results imply that preexisting anti-HIV-1 neutralizing activity does not prevent breast milk transmission. Additionally, high maternal neutralizing breadth and potency may adversely influence both the frequency of breast milk transmission and subsequent infant morbidity.
Passive immunization trials are under way to understand if preexisting antibodies can decrease mother-to-child HIV-1 transmission and improve infant outcomes. We examined the influence of preexisting maternal and infant neutralizing activity on transmission and infant morbidity in a breastfeeding mother-infant cohort. Neutralization was examined against both the exposure strains circulating in the infected mothers and a standardized reference panel previously used to estimate breadth. HIV-exposed uninfected infants did not possess a broader and more potent response against both the exposure and heterologous strains compared to infants that acquired infection. Transmitting, compared to nontransmitting, mothers had significantly higher neutralization breadth and potency but similar responses against autologous variants. Infants born to mothers with higher neutralization responses were more likely to have a serious adverse event. Our results suggest that preexisting antibodies do not protect against breast milk HIV-1 acquisition and may have negative consequences for the baby.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Maternal but Not Infant Anti-HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibody Response Associates with Enhanced Transmission and Infant Morbidity
- Creators
- Melissa Ghulam-Smith - Boston UniversityAlex Olson - Boston UniversityLaura F White - Boston UniversityCharles S Chasela - University of the WitwatersrandSascha R Ellington - Centers for Disease Control and PreventionAthena P Kourtis - Centers for Disease Control and PreventionDenise J Jamieson - Centers for Disease Control and PreventionGerald Tegha - University of MalawiCharles M van der Horst - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillManish Sagar - Boston University
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- mBio, Vol.8(5), e01373-17
- DOI
- 10.1128/mBio.01373-17
- PMID
- 29066544
- PMCID
- PMC5654929
- NLM abbreviation
- mBio
- ISSN
- 2161-2129
- eISSN
- 2150-7511
- Grant note
- P30 AI050410 / NIAID NIH HHS R01 AI122209 / NIAID NIH HHS P30 AI042853 / NIAID NIH HHS
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 10/24/2017
- Academic Unit
- Obstetrics and Gynecology; VPMA - Administration
- Record Identifier
- 9984446418202771
Metrics
16 Record Views