Fleming D T, Wasserheit J N
Division of STD Prevention, National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
Sex Transm Infect. 1999 Feb;75(1):3-17. doi: 10.1136/sti.75.1.3.
To review the scientific data on the role of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in sexual transmission of HIV infection and discuss the implications of these findings for HIV and STD prevention policy and practice.
Articles were selected from a review of Medline, accessed with the OVID search engine. The search covered articles from January 1987 to September 1998 and yielded 2101 articles. Methods used to uncover articles which might have been missed included searching for related articles by author, and combing literature reviews. In addition, all abstracts under the category "sexually transmitted diseases" from the XI and XII International Conferences on AIDS (Vancouver 1996 and Geneva 1998) and other relevant scientific meetings were reviewed. Efforts were made to locate journal articles which resulted from the research reported in the identified abstracts. All original journal articles and abstracts which met one of the following criteria were included: (1) studies of the biological plausibility or mechanism of facilitation of HIV infectiousness or susceptibility by STDs, (2) prospective cohort studies (longitudinal or nested case-control) which estimate the risk of HIV infection associated with specific STDs or STD syndromes, or (3) intervention studies which quantitate the effect which STD treatment can have on HIV incidence.
Strong evidence indicates that both ulcerative and non-ulcerative STDs promote HIV transmission by augmenting HIV infectiousness and HIV susceptibility via a variety of biological mechanisms. These effects are reflected in the risk estimates found in numerous prospective studies from four continents which range from 2.0 to 23.5, with most clustering between 2 and 5. The relative importance of ulcerative and non-ulcerative STDs appears to be complex. Owing to the greater frequency of non-ulcerative STDs in many populations, these infections may be responsible for more HIV transmission than genital ulcers. However, the limited reciprocal impact of HIV infection on non-ulcerative STDs and the evidence that non-ulcerative STDs may increase risk primarily for the receptive partner (rather than bidirectionally) may modulate the impact of these diseases. The results of two community level randomised, controlled intervention trials conducted in Africa suggest that timely provision of STD services can substantially reduce HIV incidence, but raise additional questions about the optimal way to target and implement these services to achieve the greatest effect on HIV transmission.
Available data leave little doubt that other STDs facilitate HIV transmission through direct, biological mechanisms and that early STD treatment should be part of a high quality, comprehensive HIV prevention strategy. Policy makers, HIV prevention programme managers, and providers should focus initial implementation efforts on three key areas: (i) improving access to and quality of STD clinical services; (ii) promoting early and effective STD related healthcare behaviours; and (iii) establishing surveillance systems to monitor STD and HIV trends and their interrelations.
回顾关于性传播疾病(STD)在HIV感染性传播中作用的科学数据,并讨论这些研究结果对HIV和STD预防政策及实践的意义。
从使用OVID搜索引擎检索的Medline综述中选取文章。检索涵盖1987年1月至1998年9月的文章,共得到2101篇文章。用于发现可能遗漏文章的方法包括按作者搜索相关文章以及梳理文献综述。此外,对第十一届和第十二届国际艾滋病大会(1996年温哥华和1998年日内瓦)及其他相关科学会议中“性传播疾病”类别下的所有摘要进行了审查。努力查找由已识别摘要中报告的研究产生的期刊文章。所有符合以下标准之一的原始期刊文章和摘要均被纳入:(1)关于性传播疾病促进HIV传染性或易感性的生物学合理性或机制的研究;(2)前瞻性队列研究(纵向或巢式病例对照研究),估计与特定性传播疾病或性传播疾病综合征相关的HIV感染风险;(3)量化性传播疾病治疗对HIV发病率影响的干预研究。
有力证据表明,溃疡性和非溃疡性性传播疾病均通过多种生物学机制增强HIV传染性和易感性,从而促进HIV传播。这些影响反映在来自四大洲的众多前瞻性研究中发现的风险估计值上,范围从2.0到23.5,大多数集中在2至5之间。溃疡性和非溃疡性性传播疾病的相对重要性似乎很复杂。由于许多人群中非溃疡性性传播疾病的发病率较高,这些感染可能比生殖器溃疡导致更多的HIV传播。然而,HIV感染对非溃疡性性传播疾病的有限相互影响以及非溃疡性性传播疾病可能主要增加接受方(而非双向)感染风险的证据,可能会调节这些疾病的影响。在非洲进行的两项社区层面随机对照干预试验结果表明,及时提供性传播疾病服务可大幅降低HIV发病率,但也引发了关于以何种最佳方式针对并实施这些服务以对HIV传播产生最大影响的更多问题。
现有数据毫无疑问地表明,其他性传播疾病通过直接的生物学机制促进HIV传播,早期性传播疾病治疗应成为高质量、全面HIV预防策略的一部分。政策制定者、HIV预防项目管理者和提供者应将初期实施工作重点放在三个关键领域:(i)改善性传播疾病临床服务的可及性和质量;(ii)促进与性传播疾病相关的早期有效医疗行为;(iii)建立监测系统以监测性传播疾病和HIV趋势及其相互关系。