Sexton Joseph, Garnett Geoff, Røttingen John-Arne
GLOBINF--Centre for Prevention of Global Infections, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Sex Transm Dis. 2005 Jun;32(6):351-7. doi: 10.1097/01.olq.0000154504.54686.d1.
Observational studies examining the effects of other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) on HIV susceptibility differ in the populations observed and in which "other STDs" are examined. The extent to which an STD alters the risk of transmission of HIV may vary according to disease and population characteristics.
The goals of this study were to review studies examining the effect of other STDs on HIV-1 susceptibility and to correlate their effect estimates with type of "other STD", study design, and population characteristics.
Relevant studies with longitudinal design were identified through a systematic search of the PubMed database, and their evidence was critically evaluated. Metaregression techniques were then used to correlate study characteristics with corresponding effect estimates.
Of 31 studies included, 4 contained direct data on exposure to HIV-1. Three of these were inconclusive, the fourth indicating a strong relationship between STDs and transmission of HIV. Pooled effect estimates using all studies are statistically significant and indicate a 2- to 3-fold increase in risk of HIV-1 acquisition. Effect estimates corresponding some of the "other STD" categories exhibit heterogeneity, but no significant associations with study characteristics were found.
Most of the studies lack direct exposure data, lending them susceptible to exposure bias. Another problem may be measurement error about risk factors and STD status at time of HIV-1 infection. Because direct exposure data are difficult to come by (4 of 31 studies contained such data, all but 1 inconclusive), future observational studies on the influence of STDs on HIV-1 transmission should include quantitative analyses of the sensitivity of results to potential confounding and measurement error if they are to further understanding.
关于其他性传播疾病(STD)对HIV易感性影响的观察性研究,在观察人群以及所研究的“其他性传播疾病”方面存在差异。一种性传播疾病改变HIV传播风险的程度可能因疾病和人群特征而异。
本研究的目标是回顾研究其他性传播疾病对HIV - 1易感性影响的研究,并将其效应估计值与“其他性传播疾病”的类型、研究设计和人群特征相关联。
通过对PubMed数据库进行系统检索,确定了具有纵向设计的相关研究,并对其证据进行了严格评估。然后使用元回归技术将研究特征与相应的效应估计值相关联。
在纳入的31项研究中,4项包含HIV - 1暴露的直接数据。其中3项结果不明确,第4项表明性传播疾病与HIV传播之间存在密切关系。使用所有研究的合并效应估计值具有统计学意义,表明感染HIV - 1的风险增加了2至3倍。与某些“其他性传播疾病”类别相对应的效应估计值存在异质性,但未发现与研究特征有显著关联。
大多数研究缺乏直接暴露数据,这使得它们容易受到暴露偏倚的影响。另一个问题可能是关于HIV - 1感染时危险因素和性传播疾病状态的测量误差。由于难以获得直接暴露数据(31项研究中有4项包含此类数据,除1项外均无定论),未来关于性传播疾病对HIV - 1传播影响的观察性研究若要增进理解,应包括对结果对潜在混杂因素和测量误差敏感性的定量分析。