Laboratory indicators of mastitis are not associated with elevated HIV-1 DNA loads or predictive of HIV-1 RNA loads in breast milk

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Abstract

Background. Mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HIV-1 has been associated with symptomatic and asymptomatic mastitis and with the quantity of HIV-1 RNA and DNA in maternal milk. An improved understanding of the relationship between indicators of inflammation and HIV-1 loads in breast milk could improve MTCT prevention strategies. Methods. In a cross-sectional study, laboratory indicators of mastitis (breast milk sodium [Na +] concentration, sodium:potassium ratio [Na +:K +], and leukocyte count) were related to breast milk HIV-1 RNA and DNA loads and were evaluated for predicting viral loads in milk. Results. Mastitis was present in 63 (15%) of 407, 60 (15%) of 407, and 76 (18%) of 412 milk specimens, as defined by Na + concentration >12 mmol/L, Na +:K + >1, and total leukocyte counts ≥106 cells/mL, respectively. Each indicator was associated with an increased milk HIV-1 RNA load (P

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Gantt, S., Shetty, A. K., Seidel, K. D., Matasa, K., Musingwini, G., Woelk, G., … Frenkel, L. M. (2007). Laboratory indicators of mastitis are not associated with elevated HIV-1 DNA loads or predictive of HIV-1 RNA loads in breast milk. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 196(4), 570–576. https://doi.org/10.1086/519843

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