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Maternal ART throughout gestation prevents caudate volume reductions in neonates who are HIV exposed but uninfected

Engineering and Technology

Maternal ART throughout gestation prevents caudate volume reductions in neonates who are HIV exposed but uninfected

K. Sawada, Y. Zhou, et al.

This groundbreaking study unveils critical subcortical volumetric differences linked to HIV and antiretroviral therapy in neonates. The research highlights how maternal ART can protect caudate nuclei, providing essential insights into the neurological impacts on infants. This vital investigation was conducted by an esteemed team of researchers including Kazuhiko Sawada, Yan Zhou, and Francesca Little, among others.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Introduction: Successful programmes for prevention of vertical HIV transmission have reduced the risk of infant HIV infection in South Africa from 8% in 2008 to below 1% in 2018/2019, resulting in an increasing population of children exposed to HIV perinatally but who are uninfected (HEU). However, the long-term effects of HIV and antiretroviral treatment (ART) exposure on the developing brain are not well understood. Whereas children who are HEU perform better than their HIV-infected counterparts, they demonstrate greater neurodevelopmental delay than children who are HIV unexposed and uninfected (HUU), especially in resource-poor settings. Here we investigate subcortical volumetric differences related to HIV and ART exposure in neonates. Methods: We included 120 infants (59 girls; 79 HEU) born to healthy women with and without HIV infection in Cape Town, South Africa. Of the 79 HEU infants, 40 were exposed to ART throughout gestation (HEU-pre), and 39 were exposed to ART for part of gestation (HEU-post). Post-conception mothers had a mean (± SD) gestational age of 15.4 (± 5.7) weeks at ART initiation. Mothers with HIV received standard care fixed drug combination ART (Tenofovir/Efavirenz/Emtricitabine). Infants were imaged unsedated on a 3T Skyra at mean GA equivalent of 41.5 (± 1.0) weeks. Selected regions (caudate, putamen, pallidum, thalamus, cerebellar hemispheres and vermis, and corpus callosum) were manually traced on T1-weighted images using Freeview. Results: HEU neonates had smaller left putamen volumes than HUU [β (SE) = −90.3 (45.3), p = 0.05] and caudate volume reductions that depended on ART exposure duration in utero. While the HEU-pre group demonstrated no caudate volume reductions compared to HUU, the HEU-post group had smaller caudate volumes bilaterally [β (SE) = −145.5 (45.1), p = 0.002, and −135.7 (49.7), p = 0.008 for left and right caudate, respectively]. Discussion: These findings from the first postnatal month suggest that maternal ART throughout gestation is protective to the caudate nuclei. In contrast, left putamens were smaller across all HEU newborns, despite maternal ART.
Publisher
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Published On
Mar 09, 2023
Authors
Kazuhiko Sawada, Yan Zhou, Fleur L Warton, Ernesta M Meintjes, Abdulmumin Ibrahim, Samantha Fry, Mark F Cotton, Sandra W Jacobson, Joseph L Jacobson, Christopher D Molteno, Francesca Little, Andre J W Van Der Kouwe, Barbara Laughton, Martha J Holmes
Tags
HIV
antiretroviral therapy
neonates
subcortical volumes
maternal health
caudate volume
putamen
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