Infectious Disease Epidemiology Group, Weill Cornell Medical College-Qatar, Cornell University, Qatar Foundation-Education City, Doha, Qatar.
PLoS Med. 2010 Aug;8(8):e1000444. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000444. Epub 2011 Aug 2.
Men who have sex with men (MSM) bear a disproportionately higher burden of HIV infection than the general population. MSM in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are a largely hidden population because of a prevailing stigma towards this type of sexual behavior, thereby limiting the ability to assess infection transmission patterns among them. It is widely perceived that data are virtually nonexistent on MSM and HIV in this region. The objective of this review was to delineate, for the first time, the evidence on the epidemiology of HIV among MSM in MENA.
This was a systematic review of all biological, behavioral, and other related data on HIV and MSM in MENA. Sources of data included PubMed (Medline), international organizations' reports and databases, country-level reports and databases including governmental and nongovernmental organization publications, and various other institutional documents. This review showed that onsiderable data are available on MSM and HIV in MENA. While HIV prevalence continues at low levels among different MSM groups, HIV epidemics appear to be emerging in at least few countries, with a prevalence reaching up to 28% among certain MSM groups. By 2008, the contribution of MSM transmission to the total HIV notified cases increased and exceeded 25% in several countries. The high levels of risk behavior (4-14 partners on average in the last six months among different MSM populations) and of biomarkers of risks (such as herpes simplex virus type 2 at 3%-54%), the overall low rate of consistent condom use (generally below 25%), the relative frequency of male sex work (20%-76%), and the substantial overlap with heterosexual risk behavior and injecting drug use suggest potential for further spread.
This systematic review and data synthesis indicate that HIV epidemics appear to be emerging among MSM in at least a few MENA countries and could already be in a concentrated state among several MSM groups. There is an urgent need to expand HIV surveillance and access to HIV testing, prevention, and treatment services in a rapidly narrowing window of opportunity to prevent the worst of HIV transmission among MSM in the Middle East and North Africa. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary.
男男性行为者(MSM)比一般人群更容易感染 HIV,感染负担过重。由于对这种性行为普遍存在污名化,中东和北非(MENA)地区的 MSM 是一个很大程度上被隐藏的群体,这限制了评估他们之间感染传播模式的能力。人们普遍认为,该地区几乎没有关于 MSM 和 HIV 的数据。本综述的目的是首次描述 MENA 地区 MSM 中 HIV 的流行病学证据。
这是对 MENA 地区 MSM 中 HIV 的所有生物学、行为学和其他相关数据进行的系统综述。数据来源包括 PubMed(Medline)、国际组织的报告和数据库、国家层面的报告和数据库,包括政府和非政府组织的出版物以及各种其他机构文件。本综述表明,MENA 地区有相当多的数据可用于 MSM 和 HIV。虽然不同的 MSM 群体的 HIV 流行率仍然处于低水平,但至少在少数几个国家似乎出现了 HIV 流行,某些 MSM 群体的流行率达到了 28%。到 2008 年,MSM 传播对总 HIV 报告病例的贡献增加,并在几个国家超过了 25%。高风险行为水平(不同 MSM 人群在过去六个月中平均有 4-14 个性伴侣)和风险生物标志物水平(如单纯疱疹病毒 2 型为 3%-54%)、总体上较低的 condom 使用率(通常低于 25%)、男性性工作者的相对频率(20%-76%)以及与异性风险行为和注射吸毒的大量重叠,表明存在进一步传播的潜在风险。
本系统综述和数据综合表明,HIV 流行似乎已经在至少几个 MENA 国家的 MSM 中出现,并且已经在几个 MSM 群体中处于集中状态。迫切需要在机会之窗迅速缩小的情况下扩大 HIV 监测并提供 HIV 检测、预防和治疗服务,以防止中东和北非 MSM 中 HIV 传播的最坏情况发生。请在文章后面查看编辑摘要。