Røttingen J A, Cameron D W, Garnett G P
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College School of Medicine at St Mary's, London, United Kingdom.
Sex Transm Dis. 2001 Oct;28(10):579-97. doi: 10.1097/00007435-200110000-00005.
Many studies have explored the role of "classic" sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in determining the pattern of HIV epidemics. However, the many different STDs may contribute in different ways, at different magnitudes.
To review available studies on the bidirectional interactions of HIV and STDs to explore the extent of current knowledge on the different influences of the varied STDs in heterosexual HIV epidemics.
Longitudinal studies on susceptibility and controlled studies on infectiousness and duration of disease identified on electronic databases through reference lists and citation indices up to the end of 1999 were systematically reviewed, including meta-analyses assessing the influence of STDs on susceptibility to HIV.
Studies have a clear publication bias with a significant result that hinders robust interpretation. However, genital ulcerative disease appears to have a greater impact than nonulcerative disease, and men are more affected than women by the effects of STDs on susceptibility to HIV. There is evidence that STDs increase the infectiousness of HIV from men to women, whereas the evidence is more equivocal for the infectiousness of women. Few studies identify the impact of different STDs, and there is a marked lack of studies investigating the impact of HIV infection on the transmission of other STDs.
A large body of work has measured the association between STDs and HIV. However, publication bias and gaps in the focus of studies mean that a detailed, quantitative understanding of the interaction requires much more attention.
许多研究探讨了“经典”性传播疾病(STD)在决定HIV流行模式中的作用。然而,众多不同的性传播疾病可能以不同方式、在不同程度上发挥作用。
回顾关于HIV与性传播疾病双向相互作用的现有研究,以探究目前对于各种性传播疾病在异性间HIV流行中不同影响的了解程度。
通过参考文献列表和引文索引,对截至1999年底在电子数据库中确定的关于易感性的纵向研究以及关于传染性和疾病持续时间的对照研究进行系统回顾,包括评估性传播疾病对HIV易感性影响的荟萃分析。
研究存在明显的发表偏倚,显著结果妨碍了有力的解读。然而,生殖器溃疡性疾病似乎比非溃疡性疾病影响更大,而且性传播疾病对HIV易感性的影响在男性中比在女性中更明显。有证据表明性传播疾病会增加HIV从男性到女性的传染性,而关于女性传染性的证据则更不明确。很少有研究确定不同性传播疾病的影响,而且明显缺乏调查HIV感染对其他性传播疾病传播影响的研究。
大量工作已衡量了性传播疾病与HIV之间的关联。然而,发表偏倚和研究重点的差距意味着对这种相互作用进行详细、定量的理解需要更多关注。