It remains uncertain whether HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU) infants have impaired responses to oral vaccines. We performed a cross-sectional study of 6-month-old infants recruited at birth to the ZVITAMBO trial in Zimbabwe between 1997–2001, before introduction of prevention of mother-to-child transmission interventions. We measured poliovirus-specific IgA to type 1–3 polio strains by semi-quantitative capture ELISA in cryopreserved serum samples collected from 85 HEU and 101 HIV-unexposed infants at 6 months of age, one month after their last immunisation with trivalent OPV. Almost all infants were breastfed, with the majority in both groups mixed breastfed (70.6% HEU versus 71.3% HIV-unexposed). Median (IQR) vaccine titers for HEU and HIV-unexposed infants were 1592 (618–4896) vs. 1774 (711–5431) for Sabin 1 (P = 0.46); 1895 (810–4398) vs. 2308 (1081–4283) for Sabin 2 (P = 0.52); and 1798 (774–4192) vs. 2260 (996–5723) for Sabin 3 (P = 0.18). There were no significant differences in vaccine titers between HEU and HIV-unexposed infants, suggesting that vertical HIV exposure does not impact oral poliovirus vaccine immunogenicity.
This study utilised archived samples from the Zimbabwe Vitamin A for Mothers and Babies (ZVITAMBO) trial, which has been described previously.24 Briefly, 14110 mother-infant pairs were enrolled within 96 hours of delivery in Harare, Zimbabwe between 1997 and 2001. Mother-infant pairs were eligible if neither had an acutely life-threatening condition and the infant was a singleton with birth weight >1500 g. Written informed consent was obtained. Socioeconomic and demographic information was collected by maternal interview. Follow-up was conducted at 6 weeks, 3 months and then 3 monthly to 12–24 months of age. The trial was conducted in a peri-urban setting and preceded availability of antiretroviral therapy in Zimbabwe or use of cotrimoxazole prophylaxis for HIV-exposed infants. Anthropometry was conducted at each visit, using methods and WHO reference standards as described previously.25 Blood was collected by venipuncture from all mothers and infants at baseline (≤96 hours after delivery) and at all follow-up visits. Samples were centrifuged and plasma removed within 2 hours of collection. Samples were stored in −80°C freezers with automatic generator backup Mothers underwent HIV testing at baseline using 2 parallel ELISA assays. Women testing HIV-negative were re-tested at every visit to detect HIV seroconversion. The last available sample from each child was tested for HIV by GeneScreen ELISA on plasma if aged ≥ 18 months, or by DNA polymerase chain reaction (Roche Amplicor version 1.5; Roche Diagnostic Systems, Alameda, CA) in cell pellets if aged 0.07 (a 95% confidence value cut-off used to distinguish “negative” from “positive” absorbance values and calculated according to the original method36). The intra- and inter-plate coefficients of variation for Sabin 1, 2 and 3 strains, derived from the mean O.D.s and standard deviations from 7 successive preliminary experiments run before including study samples, were 8.2%, 4.0% and 4.8% and 20.1%, 17.7% and 16.8%, respectively. As a means of continued quality assurance, the end point titer of the positive control sample in all subsequent assays had to fall within an acceptable range for the experiment to be deemed valid. The range was pre-determined based on the upper and lower limit O.D.s in the 7 preliminary experiments. Laboratory scientists were blinded to infant HIV exposure status when conducting the assays. If an end point titer could not be derived at the first attempt (e.g. bottom well O.D. ≥0.08), the assay was repeated using a 10-fold higher or lower concentration of patient sample where sufficient serum volume was available. If an end point titer could not be derived using the new sample concentration, the lowest or highest dilution factor was taken as the final end point. Extreme low and high end point titers were subsequently truncated and assigned a value equivalent to the 5th and 95th centile within the data set respectively. Baseline characteristics were compared between groups using Fisher’s exact tests for categorical variables, and Mann-Whitney or 2-sample t-tests for continuous variables, depending on data distribution. A regression model was used to calculate adjusted differences between median vaccine titers between groups, using breastfeeding, birth weight and infant sex as covariates. Statistical analyses were performed using STATA 13 (Stata-Corp, College Station, TX, USA) and Prism version 6 (GraphPad Software Inc., La Jolla, CA, USA). The original ZVITAMBO trial and this laboratory substudy were approved by the Medical Research Council of Zimbabwe, John Hopkins School of Public Health Committee on Human Research and the Montreal General Hospital Ethics Committee.
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