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Two rare cases of family HIV
transmission between adults reported
http://www.aidsmap.com/news/newsdisplay2.asp?newsId=2275
29
August 2003
Edwin J. Bernard
Two similarly unusual but unconnected cases of
HIV transmission within two Australian families are
reported in the September 5th issue of AIDS,
providing a sobering reminder that HIV can occasionally
be acquired by surprising routes. These also appear to
be the first reports of one adult family member
infecting another that involve a source patient with
unrecognised HIV infection.
The first concerned a 16 year-old girl and her
18 year-old sister who shared a bathroom at their family
home. The younger sister became aware of her HIV
infection after donating blood in 1999. She had never
had sex, nor any other risk-factor for acquiring HIV,
and both of her parents were HIV antibody negative. The
elder sister was subsequently found to be HIV antibody
positive, and recalled having symptoms of seroconversion
illness (severe ‘glandular fever’) in January 1997,
one month after her first ever sexual encounter, with a
Russian man.
Subsequent HIV analysis found that both younger
and elder sister were infected with ‘Russian-type’
subtype A, which is very rare in Australia, and env
and RT sequencing were strikingly similar, leading to
the conclusion that the elder sister had infected the
younger. The only risk factor ascertained by rigourous
personal interviews with both sisters and their parents
was their occasional sharing of the same razor for
shaving body hair.
The second case concerned a 55 year-old woman
and her son, in his early thirties. The mother first
became aware of her HIV infection after donating blood
in 1997. She had been married for 25 years, and reported
no sexual partners during that period other than her
husband, who was found to be HIV antibody negative.
Their teenage daughter was also HIV antibody negative.
The son had been living in Thailand and reported
occasional unprotected sex during his time there. He
moved home for six months in December 1996, and during
that time had active psoriasis.
Subsequent HIV analysis found that both mother
and son were infected with subtype E (CRF01_AE), which
is common in Thailand and extremely rare in Australia,
leading the authors to conclude that the son had
infected the mother. The only risk factor for the mother
acquiring HIV from her son appeared to be applying
topical therapy (lotion or creme) to her son’s
psoriasis lesions, which were reported to be dry and did
not bleed.
Although no route of transmission for either of
these cases was conclusively identified, the authors
cite a previous case report of razor sharing as a prior
possible source of HIV infection. However, applying
lotion to dry psoriasis lesions has never previously
been identified as a possible source of HIV infection.
The accuracy of the history of the second case
is somewhat muddied by the fact that the son declined a
face-to-face interview, agreeing only to answer
questions in writing. Additionally, the son also had
hepatitis C co-infection, suggesting to the authors that
he may have had an undisclosed history of injecting drug
use.
Since the authors relied totally on
self-report, the actual routes of transmission may have
been missed or unrecognised and the conclusions reached
here do not in any way represent a significant risk
factor for acquiring HIV, which is primarily a sexually
transmitted infection.
Reference
French MA et al. Intrafamilial transmission
of HIV-1 infection from individuals with unrecognized
HIV-1 infection AIDS 17: 1977-1981, 2003.
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