Background
Compared to HIV-negative women, HIV-infected women have increased risk of low birth weight (LBW) and preterm delivery (PTD). We assessed whether severity of maternal HIV-1 disease was associated with LBW or PTD.
Methods
Secondary analysis of The Malaria and HIV in Pregnancy prospective cohort, which enrolled HIV-positive, pregnant Malawian women from 2000–2004. Included participants (n=809) were normotensive, antiretroviral treatment naïve women who delivered a live, singleton infant. Binomial regression models were used to assess the unadjusted and adjusted prevalence ratios (PRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) of the effect of severity of HIV-1 disease, defined by viral load and CD4-positive T-cell counts, on prevalence of LBW and PTD.
Results
In unadjusted analyses, among those with malaria (n=198), there was no association between severity of HIV-1 infection and LBW, while among women without malaria (n=611), we observed a harmful association between both increasing peripheral viral load and LBW (PR: 1.44 per one-log10 increase, 95% CI: 1.12, 1.86) and placental viral load and LBW (PR: 1.24 per one-log10 increase, 95% CI: 1.00, 1.53). We observed a similar association between increasing placental viral load and PTD (PR: 1.33 per one-log10 increase, 95% CI: 1.04, 1.69). These associations persisted in multivariate models adjusted for residence, maternal education, primigravid status, and maternal anemia.
Conclusions
In malaria-negative women, maternal HIV-1 disease severity was significantly associated with increased prevalence of LBW and PTD. Such an association was not found in the malaria-infected women.
Common features of amyloid-like proteotoxic aggregates are the ability to bind Congo red (congophilia) and to induce fluorescence of thioflavin-T (ThT). Based on the prior discovery that women with preeclampsia exhibit urine congophilia, we proposed that amyloid-like protein aggregates present in urine also circulate in the bloodstream and this feature is linked to disease severity and clinical phenotype. ThT fluorescence was investigated in 217 paired serum and urine samples from women with severe features of preeclampsia (n=101; median [interquartile range] gestational age [GA], 32 [29-35] weeks), mild features of preeclampsia (n=22; GA, 36 [36-37] weeks), chronic hypertension (n=15; GA, 38 [37-39] weeks), healthy pregnant controls (n=57; GA, 39 [38-39] weeks), and nonpregnant controls (n=22). Serum and urine fluorescence attributable to advanced glycation end products was measured in the same samples with correction for autofluorescence. There were no GA-related changes in ThT fluorescence, although near-term serum ThT fluorescence increased compared with nonpregnant state. Compared with healthy pregnant controls, serum and urine ThT fluorescence was increased in severe features of preeclampsia (<0.001 for both) but not in mild features of preeclampsia or chronic hypertension. Except for chronic hypertension, advanced glycation end products-related fluorescence of serum or urine did not differ from controls. Urine congophilia had a stronger relationship with preeclampsia severity compared with either urine or serum ThT fluorescence. However, serum ThT fluorescence was independently associated with clinical features of hemolysis, elevated liver enzyme levels, and low platelet levels syndrome (=0.003). We demonstrate that ThT fluorescence, a marker of amyloid-like aggregates, is increased in serum of women with preeclampsia and likely because of their cytotoxicity associated with hemolysis, elevated liver enzyme levels, and low platelet levels syndrome.
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