Low
Blood Levels of HIV Reduce Risk of Heterosexual Transmission
The
lower the level of HIV in the blood, the less likely infected
persons will transmit the virus to heterosexual partners, according
to a study in Africa supported by the National Institutes of Health
(NIH). In this week's New England Journal of Medicine, an
international team reports results of the largest survey ever to
examine the link between the concentration of the virus in a
person's blood-known as viral load and other risk factors for HIV
heterosexual transmission. The findings suggest viral load is the
most important predictor of HIV transmission between men and women,
regardless of the gender of the transmitting individual.
The two-and-a-half year survey followed more than 400 heterosexual
couples, in each of which only one person was HIV-positive. The
study found that the more virus individuals carried, the more likely
they were to infect their sexual partners. Conversely, no one who
had fewer than 1,500 copies of HIV per milliliter (ml) of blood
transmitted the virus to his or her partner.
"The findings uphold the strategic benefit of lowering levels of HIV
in the blood," says Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., director of the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), which
supported the study. "This research lends hope that even if HIV
cannot be eradicated from the body, antiretroviral drugs or vaccines
may help reduce heterosexual transmission of HIV, the predominant
way AIDS is spreading in Africa and many parts of the world."
The study, co-funded by the National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development (NICHD), took place in Uganda's rural Rakai
district. Ugandan researchers from Makerere University in Kampala
and the Uganda Virus Research Institute/Ministry of Health in
Entebbe collaborated with U.S. colleagues from Johns Hopkins
University, Columbia University and NIH. The article's senior
author, Thomas C. Quinn, M.D., is professor of medicine at Hopkins
and senior investigator in NIAID's Laboratory of Immunoregulation.
Dr. Quinn and his colleagues set out to better define risk factors
associated with heterosexual transmission. "Viral load was the
critical factor among the couples in our study," he explains. "We
observed a clear dose response. With every 10-fold rise in the
concentration of HIV in the bloodstream, transmission more than
doubled."
The study prospectively followed 415 HIV-discordant couples, 228
HIV-positive men, and 187 HIV-positive women and their HIV-negative
long-term sexual partners who were participating in the Rakai
Project, a larger trial of HIV prevention. All the couples received
free condoms, voluntary confidential HIV testing and counseling,
treatment, and health education directed at preventing HIV
transmission. In this remote district of Uganda, anti-HIV drugs are
not available.
The research team visited the couples at 10-month intervals for up
to 30 months, conducting private, same-sex interviews. Researchers
assessed a variety of factors, such as behaviors (for example,
condom use, number of sexual partners and frequency of intercourse),
general health history, AIDS-defining symptoms or conditions, and
circumcision status. Study volunteers also gave blood and urine
samples, and women provided self-collected vaginal swabs for
evaluation of HIV and sexually transmitted diseases.
Individuals were privately notified of test results during the study
and encouraged to share their HIV status with their partners.
Despite provision of condoms, HIV testing and counseling, and health
education, 90 (22 percent) of the previously uninfected partners
became HIV-positive.
Using blood samples archived from each study visit, the scientists
later determined HIV viral loads using polymerase chain reaction
assays. They found higher viral load correlated with higher rates of
HIV transmission. Nearly 80 percent of the cases of new infections
resulted from exposure to HIV-positive partners with more than
10,000 copies of HIV per ml of blood.
"Our findings are strikingly consistent with results from studies of
viral load in cases of mother-to-child HIV infection," notes Dr.
Quinn. "Theoretically, just as drugs have helped reduce prenatal
transmission, antiretroviral regimens that dampen HIV viral load
should also be effective against heterosexual transmission of HIV.
But we need more studies to confirm this."
Antiretroviral therapy is seen primarily as a benefit to the
HIV-infected individual, say the study's co-principal investigators,
Maria J. Wawer, M.D., of Columbia and Ronald H. Gray, M.D., of
Hopkins; however, the new results suggest that measures to reduce
viral load may provide a means of controlling the epidemic, they
comment. Similarly, Ugandan principal investigator Nelson Sewankambo,
M.D., dean of medicine at Makerere University, notes the need to
develop low-cost and feasible methods of reducing viral load for use
in resource-poor settings.
Along with viral load, the team also examined several other
important variables for risk of HIV transmission. Overall, they
found no statistical difference in the rate of transmission from
male to female compared with female to male. However, circumcision
in the male was significantly associated with decreased HIV
acquisition. In addition, younger couples (aged 15 to 19 years)
experienced the highest rates of seroconversion.
"The Rakai Project is the most comprehensive survey of heterosexual
transmission in Africa, where the HIV epidemic has hit the hardest,"
says project officer Rod Hoff, D.Sc., with NIAID's Division of AIDS.
"This team's study is remarkable for its scope and quality of
science, and it points the way for developing new interventions to
prevent HIV transmission."
NIAID conducts and supports research to prevent, diagnose and treat
illnesses such as HIV disease and other sexually transmitted
diseases, tuberculosis, malaria, asthma and allergies. NICHD
supports and conducts research on the reproductive, neurobiological,
developmental and behavioral processes that determine and maintain
the health of children, adults, families and populations. NIAID and
NICHD are components of the NIH, an agency of the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services.
Press
releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related materials are
available on the NIAID Web site at
www.niaid.nih.gov.