Nikolopoulos Georgios K, Kostaki Evangelia-Georgia, Paraskevis Dimitrios
Hellenic Centre for Diseases Control and Prevention, Amarousio, Greece; Hellenic Scientific Society for the Study of AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Transmission Reduction Intervention Project-Athens site, Athens, Greece.
Department of Hygiene, Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
Infect Genet Evol. 2016 Dec;46:256-268. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2016.06.017. Epub 2016 Jun 7.
HIV strains continuously evolve, tend to recombine, and new circulating variants are being discovered. Novel strains complicate efforts to develop a vaccine against HIV and may exhibit higher transmission efficiency and virulence, and elevated resistance to antiretroviral agents. The United Nations Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) set an ambitious goal to end HIV as a public health threat by 2030 through comprehensive strategies that include epidemiological input as the first step of the process. In this context, molecular epidemiology becomes invaluable as it captures trends in HIV evolution rates that shape epidemiological pictures across several geographical areas. This review briefly summarizes the molecular epidemiology of HIV among people who inject drugs (PWID) in Europe and Asia. Following high transmission rates of subtype G and CRF14_BG among PWID in Portugal and Spain, two European countries, Greece and Romania, experienced recent HIV outbreaks in PWID that consisted of multiple transmission clusters including subtypes B, A, F1, and recombinants CRF14_BG and CRF35_AD. The latter was first identified in Afghanistan. Russia, Ukraine, and other Former Soviet Union (FSU) states are still facing the devastating effects of epidemics in PWID produced by A (also known as IDU-A), B (known as IDU-B), and CRF03_AB. In Asia, CRF01_AE and subtype B (Western B and Thai B) travelled from PWID in Thailand to neighboring countries. Recombination hotspots in South China, Northern Myanmar, and Malaysia have been generating several intersubtype and inter-CRF recombinants (e.g. CRF07_BC, CRF08_BC, CRF33_01B etc.), increasing the complexity of HIV molecular patterns.
HIV毒株不断进化,易于重组,新的流行变体不断被发现。新型毒株使研发抗HIV疫苗的工作变得复杂,且可能具有更高的传播效率和毒力,以及对抗逆转录病毒药物的更高耐药性。联合国艾滋病规划署(UNAIDS)设定了一个雄心勃勃的目标,即到2030年通过综合策略将HIV作为公共卫生威胁终结,这些策略包括将流行病学投入作为该进程的第一步。在这种背景下,分子流行病学变得至关重要,因为它能捕捉HIV进化速率的趋势,而这些趋势塑造了多个地理区域的流行病学情况。本综述简要总结了欧洲和亚洲注射毒品者(PWID)中HIV的分子流行病学情况。在葡萄牙和西班牙这两个欧洲国家的PWID中G亚型和CRF14_BG传播率较高之后,希腊和罗马尼亚的PWID近期出现了HIV疫情,其中包括多个传播集群,涉及B、A、F1亚型以及重组体CRF14_BG和CRF35_AD。后者首次在阿富汗被发现。俄罗斯、乌克兰和其他前苏联(FSU)国家仍面临着由A(也称为IDU-A)、B(称为IDU-B)和CRF03_AB导致的PWID疫情的毁灭性影响。在亚洲,CRF01_AE和B亚型(西方B型和泰国B型)从泰国的PWID传播到了邻国。中国南部、缅甸北部和马来西亚的重组热点地区一直在产生几种亚型间和CRF间的重组体(如CRF07_BC、CRF08_BC、CRF33_01B等),增加了HIV分子模式的复杂性。