| Literature DB >> 3006485 |
J K Kreiss, L W Kitchen, H E Prince, C K Kasper, A L Goldstein, P H Naylor, O Preble, J A Stewart, M Essex.
Abstract
A cohort of 63 hemophiliac subjects was followed for clinical and immunologic abnormalities related to the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). When evaluated in early 1984, antibody to human T cell leukemia virus type III (HTLV-III) was detected in the serum of 59 percent (24 of 41) of factor VIII or IX concentrate recipients, but in none (0 of six) of the cryoprecipitate/fresh frozen plasma recipients. HTLV-III-seropositive hemophiliac subjects, on average, had been exposed to twice as much concentrate during the previous year as seronegative hemophiliac subjects. The seropositive group had a significantly lower mean helper/suppressor T cell ratio and absolute helper T cell level than the seronegative group. By early 1984, 13 hemophiliac subjects in the study population had lymphadenopathy and one had AIDS. Antibody to HTLV-III was detected in the serum of 13 of these 14 hemophiliac subjects with overt clinical disease. The prevalence of lymphadenopathy or AIDS among HTLV-III-seropositive hemophiliac subjects was 54 percent (13 of 24). It is concluded that HTLV-III antibody occurs with high frequency in hemophiliac subjects, and is related to the amount of factor VIII or IX concentrate infused. Over half of HTLV-III-seropositive hemophiliac subjects in this population had overt clinical disease with either lymphadenopathy or AIDS.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3006485 DOI: 10.1016/0002-9343(86)90704-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med ISSN: 0002-9343 Impact factor: 4.965