Seroepidemiological studies of HTLV-III antibody
prevalence among selected groups of heterosexual Africans.
Clumeck N, Robert-Guroff M, Van de Perre P, Jennings A, Sibomana J,
Demol P, Cran S, Gallo RC.
T-lymphocyte subsets and human T-cell lymphotropic virus
type III antibody prevalence were studied in African patients with the acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or AIDS-related complex (ARC), and in female
prostitutes. African blood donors and healthy Zairian and Rwandese persons
matched for age, sex, and annual income served as controls. Seropositivity was
noted in 46 (87%) of 53 patients with AIDS, 29 (88%) of 33 patients with ARC,
67 (80%) of 84 prostitutes, and five (12.5%) of 40 and eight (15.5%) of 51
healthy controls and blood donors, respectively. Patients with AIDS and ARC had
a significantly lower OKT4/OKT8 ratio than healthy African controls. These
studies suggest that human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III infection has
already spread extensively into the general African population and that female
prostitutes could be an important human reservoir of AIDS virus in the
heterosexual population.
PMID: 2997491 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]