Dynamics of persistent oral cytomegalovirus shedding during primary infection in ugandan infants

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Abstract

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection occurs frequently in young children, who, when infected, are then a major source of transmission. Oral CMV shedding by 14 infants with primary infection was comprehensively characterized using quantitative polymerase chain reaction weekly for ≥9 months. Three phases of oral shedding were identified: expansion, transition, and clearance. Viral expansion occurred over a median of 7 weeks, with a median doubling time of 3 days. During the transition phase, expansion slowed over a median of 6 weeks before peak viral load was reached. Clearance was slow (22-day median half-life), and shedding did not resolve during observation for any infant. Mathematical modeling demonstrated that prolonged oral CMV expansion is explained by a low within-host reproduction number (median, 1.63) and a delayed immune response that only decreases the infected cell half-life by 44%. Thus, the prolonged oral CMV shedding observed during primary infection can be explained by slow viral expansion and inefficient immunologic control.

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Mayer, B. T., Matrajt, L., Casper, C., Krantz, E. M., Corey, L., Wald, A., … Schiffer, J. T. (2016). Dynamics of persistent oral cytomegalovirus shedding during primary infection in ugandan infants. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 214(11), 1735–1743. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiw442

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