Kuiken C, Thakallapalli R, Esklid A, de Ronde A
Los Alamos National Laboratory, NM 87545, USA.
Am J Epidemiol. 2000 Nov 1;152(9):814-22. doi: 10.1093/aje/152.9.814.
The extreme variability of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) makes it possible to conduct transmission studies on the basis of genetic analysis and to trace global and local patterns in the spread of the virus. Two such patterns are discussed in this paper. First, in many European countries (e.g., Scotland and Germany), homosexual men tend to be infected with a subtly different variant of HIV-1 than intravenous drug users. In other European countries (e.g., Norway and Sweden), a distinction is also found between the two risk groups; but based on available data, the distinction is a different one. The second pattern is a worldwide tendency for homosexual men in many different geographic regions around the world to carry HIV-1 subtype B, the variant that is most prevalent in the Americas, Europe, and Australia. In contrast, people infected via other routes (mostly heterosexual contact) in those same countries carry a mixture of other subtypes. Biologic differences between the viruses infecting different risk groups have not been found; the most likely explanation for the findings is different epidemiologic patterns. Although data are still scarce, the authors attempt to use these patterns in the reconstruction of the worldwide spread of the HIV epidemic.
1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)的极端变异性使得基于基因分析开展传播研究以及追踪该病毒传播的全球和局部模式成为可能。本文讨论了两种这样的模式。首先,在许多欧洲国家(如苏格兰和德国),男同性恋者感染的HIV-1变体往往与静脉吸毒者感染的变体略有不同。在其他欧洲国家(如挪威和瑞典),这两个风险群体之间也存在差异;但根据现有数据,这种差异是不同的。第二种模式是,在世界许多不同地理区域,男同性恋者普遍携带HIV-1 B亚型,该变体在美洲、欧洲和澳大利亚最为流行。相比之下,在这些相同国家中,通过其他途径(主要是异性接触)感染的人携带多种其他亚型。尚未发现感染不同风险群体的病毒之间存在生物学差异;对这些发现最合理的解释是不同的流行病学模式。尽管数据仍然稀少,但作者试图利用这些模式来重建HIV疫情的全球传播情况。