Pregnancies in human immunodeficiency virus-infected sex partners of hemophilic men. The Hemophilia-AIDS Collaborative Study Group
J. Jason and B. L. Evatt
Division of Host Factors, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, Ga. 30333.
We investigated 24 completed pregnancies of 20 healthy, human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-seropositive sex partners of 20 seropositive
hemophilic men. One woman had recurrent herpes simplex type 2 infection; no
woman was known to use illicit drugs or to have other purported cofactors
for vertical HIV transmission. For 8 offspring, the mothers learned of
their partners' serostatus and received counseling against pregnancy prior
to the fifth month of gestation; for 9 offspring (37.5%), the mothers
learned of their own seropositivity and received counseling prior to the
fifth month. Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome developed in 7 (35%) of 20
fathers, 4 of whom died; HIV-related symptoms developed in 4; severe liver
disease developed in 2; and 7 (35%) were in good health. In four mothers
(20%) HIV-related symptoms developed. Five offspring were breast-fed for 2
days to more than 3 years, two while the mother was known to be
seropositive; four of these were seronegative and healthy, and one was
seropositive at 30 months of age and had persistent cervical
lymphadenopathy at 48 months of age. Infants were born at term; median
birth weight was 2.86 kg. Solely on the basis of serologic studies and
symptoms for those with more than 15 months of follow-up, the minimum
perinatal transmission rate for this group of women without putative
transmission cofactors (drug usage, promiscuity, malnutrition, HIV
symptoms) was at least 25%, a rate comparable to that reported for women in
other risk groups.