Administration of Live Varicella Vaccine to HIV-Infected Children with Current or Past Significant Depression of CD4+ T Cells.
Levin, Myron J. 1; Gershon, Anne A. 2; Weinberg, Adriana 1; Song, Lin-Ye 4; Fentin, Terrence 4; Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group 265 Team 3,a
[Article]
Journal of Infectious Diseases.
194(2):247-255, July 15, 2006.
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Background: Varicella can be a severe illness in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected children. The licensed, live attenuated varicella vaccine is safe and immunogenic in HIV-infected children with minimal symptoms and good preservation of CD4 T cells (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention immunologic category 1)
Methods: To study the safety and immunogenicity of this vaccine in varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-naive, HIV-infected children with moderate symptoms and/or more pronounced past or current decreases in CD4 T cell counts, such children (age, 1-8 years) received 2 doses of vaccine 3 months apart. The children were observed in a structured fashion for adverse events. Blood was tested for VZV antibody and VZV-specific cell-mediated immunity (CMI) at baseline, 8 weeks after each dose, and annually for 3 years. Subjects who had no evidence of immunity 1 year after vaccination received a third dose and were retested
Results: The vaccine was well tolerated; there were no vaccine-related, serious adverse events. Regardless of immunologic category, at least 79% of HIV-infected vaccine recipients developed VZV-specific antibody and/or CMI 2 months after 2 doses of vaccine, and 83% were responders 1 year after vaccination
Conclusions: HIV-infected children with a CD4 T cell percentage of >=15% and a CD4 T cell count of >=200 cells/[mu]L are likely to benefit from receiving varicella vaccine
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