Røttingen John-Arne, Garnett Geoffrey P
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College School of Medicine at St. Mary's, London, United Kingdom.
Sex Transm Dis. 2002 Dec;29(12):818-27. doi: 10.1097/00007435-200212000-00014.
The spread of HIV is in part determined by the probability of transmission within a sexual partnership.
The goal of the study was to examine the relationship between the per-partnership and per-act transmission probability and explore how different assumptions influence the measurement of cofactors and interventions.
We defined the mathematical relationship between the transmission probability of HIV per sex act and per partnership for the proposed biologic mechanisms. For completeness we included the original assumption of a per-partnership transmission probability and also the simple binomial model, which cannot be ruled out completely because of potential measurement error in discordant partner studies.
A constant per-act or per-partnership transmission probability provides unsatisfactory models of the observed relationship between the number of sex acts and the likelihood of transmission. Either there is extreme heterogeneity in the transmission likelihood between partnerships or the transmission likelihood within a partnership decreases over time. These models cause the relative risk for a partnership in which a cofactor STD is present to decrease more rapidly than would be expected. The transmission probability per-partnership is substantially reduced only when there is a dramatic reduction in unprotected acts (e.g., condom use) or the transmission probability per act (e.g., due to antiretrovirals or STD treatment). Combining interventions can sometimes generate a more-than-additive impact, particularly with extreme heterogeneity.
More empirical studies are needed to develop realistic models of transmission providing quantitative understanding of the HIV transmission process.
艾滋病毒的传播部分取决于性伴侣关系中的传播概率。
本研究的目的是检验每次性伴侣关系和每次性行为的传播概率之间的关系,并探讨不同假设如何影响对协同因素和干预措施的衡量。
对于所提出的生物学机制,我们定义了艾滋病毒每次性行为和每次性伴侣关系的传播概率之间的数学关系。为了全面起见,我们纳入了每次性伴侣关系传播概率的原始假设以及简单二项式模型,由于不一致伴侣研究中存在潜在测量误差,该模型不能被完全排除。
恒定的每次性行为或每次性伴侣关系传播概率无法令人满意地模拟性行为次数与传播可能性之间的观察关系。要么不同性伴侣关系之间的传播可能性存在极大异质性,要么性伴侣关系内的传播可能性随时间降低。这些模型导致存在协同因素性传播感染的性伴侣关系的相对风险比预期下降得更快。只有在无保护性行为(如使用避孕套)大幅减少或每次性行为的传播概率(如由于抗逆转录病毒药物或性传播感染治疗)大幅降低时,每次性伴侣关系的传播概率才会大幅降低。联合干预措施有时会产生大于相加的影响,尤其是在存在极大异质性的情况下。
需要更多实证研究来建立现实的传播模型,以便对艾滋病毒传播过程进行定量理解。