Hoenigl Martin, Chaillon Antoine, Kessler Harald H, Haas Bernhard, Stelzl Evelyn, Weninger Karin, Little Susan J, Mehta Sanjay R
Division of Infectious Diseases, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California, United States of America.
Section of Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Medical University of Graz, Graz, Austria.
PLoS One. 2016 Mar 11;11(3):e0151478. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151478. eCollection 2016.
To gain deeper insight into the epidemiology of HIV-1 transmission in South-East Austria we performed a retrospective analysis of 259 HIV-1 partial pol sequences obtained from unique individuals newly diagnosed with HIV infection in South-East Austria from 2008 through 2014. After quality filtering, putative transmission linkages were inferred when two sequences were ≤1.5% genetically different. Multiple linkages were resolved into putative transmission clusters. Further phylogenetic analyses were performed using BEAST v1.8.1. Finally, we investigated putative links between the 259 sequences from South-East Austria and all publicly available HIV polymerase sequences in the Los Alamos National Laboratory HIV sequence database. We found that 45.6% (118/259) of the sampled sequences were genetically linked with at least one other sequence from South-East Austria forming putative transmission clusters. Clustering individuals were more likely to be men who have sex with men (MSM; p<0.001), infected with subtype B (p<0.001) or subtype F (p = 0.02). Among clustered males who reported only heterosexual (HSX) sex as an HIV risk, 47% clustered closely with MSM (either as pairs or within larger MSM clusters). One hundred and seven of the 259 sequences (41.3%) from South-East Austria had at least one putative inferred linkage with sequences from a total of 69 other countries. In conclusion, analysis of HIV-1 sequences from newly diagnosed individuals residing in South-East Austria revealed a high degree of national and international clustering mainly within MSM. Interestingly, we found that a high number of heterosexual males clustered within MSM networks, suggesting either linkage between risk groups or misrepresentation of sexual risk behaviors by subjects.
为了更深入地了解奥地利东南部地区HIV-1传播的流行病学情况,我们对2008年至2014年期间在奥地利东南部新诊断出感染HIV的259例个体的HIV-1部分pol序列进行了回顾性分析。经过质量筛选后,当两个序列的基因差异≤1.5%时,推断存在潜在的传播联系。多个联系被解析为潜在的传播簇。使用BEAST v1.8.1进行了进一步的系统发育分析。最后,我们研究了奥地利东南部的259个序列与洛斯阿拉莫斯国家实验室HIV序列数据库中所有公开可用的HIV聚合酶序列之间的潜在联系。我们发现,45.6%(118/259)的采样序列与奥地利东南部的至少一个其他序列存在基因联系,形成了潜在的传播簇。聚类个体更有可能是男男性行为者(MSM;p<0.001),感染B亚型(p<0.001)或F亚型(p = 0.02)。在仅报告异性性行为(HSX)作为HIV风险的聚类男性中,47%与MSM紧密聚类(成对或在较大的MSM簇内)。奥地利东南部的259个序列中有107个(41.3%)与来自其他69个国家的序列至少有一个潜在的推断联系。总之,对居住在奥地利东南部新诊断个体的HIV-1序列分析显示,主要在MSM群体中存在高度的国内和国际聚类。有趣的是,我们发现大量异性恋男性聚类在MSM网络中,这表明要么是风险群体之间存在联系,要么是受试者对性风险行为的表述存在偏差。