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The HIV RNA pattern in perinatally infected
infants differs from that in infected adults. High HIV RNA copy numbers
persist in infected children for prolonged periods (35, 36). In one
prospective study, HIV RNA levels generally were low at birth (i.e., <10,000
copies/mL), increased to high values by age two months (most infants had
values >100,000 copies/mL, ranging from undetectable to nearly 10 million
copies/mL), and then decreased slowly; the mean HIV RNA level during the
first year of life was 185,000 copies/mL (23).
In contrast to the adult pattern, after the first year of life, HIV RNA copy
number slowly declines over the next few years of life (23, 37–39). This
pattern probably reflects the lower efficiency of an immature but developing
immune system in containing viral replication and possibly a greater number
of HIV-susceptible cells. |