Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, MRC Centre for Outbreak Analysis and Modelling, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, Paddington, London, UK.
Int J Epidemiol. 2010 Aug;39(4):1048-63. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyq057. Epub 2010 Apr 20.
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infectiousness of anal intercourse (AI) has not been systematically reviewed, despite its role driving HIV epidemics among men who have sex with men (MSM) and its potential contribution to heterosexual spread. We assessed the per-act and per-partner HIV transmission risk from AI exposure for heterosexuals and MSM and its implications for HIV prevention.
Systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature on HIV-1 infectiousness through AI was conducted. PubMed was searched to September 2008. A binomial model explored the individual risk of HIV infection with and without highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART).
A total of 62,643 titles were searched; four publications reporting per-act and 12 reporting per-partner transmission estimates were included. Overall, random effects model summary estimates were 1.4% [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.2-2.5)] and 40.4% (95% CI 6.0-74.9) for per-act and per-partner unprotected receptive AI (URAI), respectively. There was no significant difference between per-act risks of URAI for heterosexuals and MSM. Per-partner unprotected insertive AI (UIAI) and combined URAI-UIAI risk were 21.7% (95% CI 0.2-43.3) and 39.9% (95% CI 22.5-57.4), respectively, with no available per-act estimates. Per-partner combined URAI-UIAI summary estimates, which adjusted for additional exposures other than AI with a 'main' partner [7.9% (95% CI 1.2-14.5)], were lower than crude (unadjusted) estimates [48.1% (95% CI 35.3-60.8)]. Our modelling demonstrated that it would require unreasonably low numbers of AI HIV exposures per partnership to reconcile the summary per-act and per-partner estimates, suggesting considerable variability in AI infectiousness between and within partnerships over time. AI may substantially increase HIV transmission risk even if the infected partner is receiving HAART; however, predictions are highly sensitive to infectiousness assumptions based on viral load.
Unprotected AI is a high-risk practice for HIV transmission, probably with substantial variation in infectiousness. The significant heterogeneity between infectiousness estimates means that pooled AI HIV transmission probabilities should be used with caution. Recent reported rises in AI among heterosexuals suggest a greater understanding of the role AI plays in heterosexual sex lives may be increasingly important for HIV prevention.
尽管肛交(AI)在男男性行为者(MSM)中导致 HIV 流行方面起着重要作用,并且可能对异性传播有所贡献,但人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的传染性尚未得到系统评估。我们评估了异性恋者和 MSM 中 AI 暴露的单次行为和单次伴侣 HIV 传播风险及其对 HIV 预防的影响。
对有关 HIV-1 通过 AI 传染性的文献进行系统回顾和荟萃分析。检索了 PubMed 数据库,检索截至 2008 年 9 月。二项式模型探讨了接受高效抗逆转录病毒治疗(HAART)前后的 HIV 感染个体风险。
共检索到 62643 篇标题;纳入了 4 项报告单次行为和 12 项报告单次伴侣传播估计的出版物。总体而言,随机效应模型汇总估计值分别为 1.4%(95%置信区间 0.2-2.5)和 40.4%(95%置信区间 6.0-74.9),用于无保护的接受方 AI(URAI)。异性恋者和 MSM 的 AI 单次行为风险无显著差异。无保护的插入 AI(UIAI)和合并 URAI-UIAI 风险分别为 21.7%(95%置信区间 0.2-43.3)和 39.9%(95%置信区间 22.5-57.4),无单次行为估计值。调整除 AI 之外与“主要”伴侣的其他额外暴露后,合并 URAI-UIAI 的伴侣内汇总估计值[7.9%(95%置信区间 1.2-14.5)]低于原始(未调整)估计值[48.1%(95%置信区间 35.3-60.8)]。我们的模型表明,为了使汇总的单次行为和单次伴侣估计值一致,每个伴侣关系中需要非常低数量的 AI HIV 暴露,这表明随着时间的推移,AI 的传染性在伴侣之间和伴侣内部具有很大的变异性。即使感染伴侣接受了 HAART,AI 也可能大大增加 HIV 传播风险;但是,基于病毒载量的传染性假设的预测高度敏感。
无保护的 AI 是 HIV 传播的高危行为,可能具有相当大的传染性变异性。传染性估计值之间的显著异质性意味着应谨慎使用 AI HIV 传播概率的汇总值。最近报告的异性恋者中 AI 的上升表明,越来越需要深入了解 AI 在异性恋性生活中的作用,这可能对 HIV 预防越来越重要。