DESCRIPTION (adapted from the Abstract): Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) is a soft
tissue tumor most commonly found in individuals with immunodeficiency,
including the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Recent studies
have identified a new human herpesvirus, Kaposi's sarcoma-associated
herpesvirus (KSHV)--or human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8)--found in almost all KS
tissues and body cavity-based lymphomas. This virus may play an important
role in the transformation and development of KS. One of the many pertinent
questions regarding this virus is its route of transmission. The Principal
Investigator and his associates have initiated a collaboration with the
University of Zambia Medical School to study the etiology of KS. Zambia has
a very high incidence of HIV infection in women and children; moreover, KS
constitutes about 20-25 of the malignancies seen in Zambian infants and
children. These rates provide a unique opportunity to explore the possible
vertical transmission route of HHV-8 and whether HHV-8 infection leads to KS
development in children. The researchers have already found that Zambian
children and infants with KS carry HHV-8 sequences and that many normal and
HIV1-infected pregnant Zambian women are also infected by HHV-8. The
Investigator proposes to expand on these initial observations to a large
group of Zambian pregnant women to determine whether vertical transmission
of HHV-8 occurs. He hypothesizes that HHV-8 can be transmitted vertically
and that immune suppression, HIV-1, and other opportunistic infections
increase the probability of transmission. His immediate experimental
approach is to use serological tests, solution-based PCR, and in situ PCR to
determine whether vertical transmission can occur, the cell types that
harbor the virus, whether immune suppression, opportunistic infections, and
high HHV-8 viral load correlated with vertical transmission. His long-term
objective is to understand the roles played by HHV-8 in KS.
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