Chaillon Antoine, Avila-Ríos Santiago, Wertheim Joel O, Dennis Ann, García-Morales Claudia, Tapia-Trejo Daniela, Mejía-Villatoro Carlos, Pascale Juan M, Porras-Cortés Guillermo, Quant-Durán Carlos J, Lorenzana Ivette, Meza Rita I, Palou Elsa Y, Manzanero Marvin, Cedillos Rolando A, Reyes-Terán Gustavo, Mehta Sanjay R
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Center for Research in Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Respiratory Diseases, Mexico City, Mexico.
Infect Genet Evol. 2017 Oct;54:98-107. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2017.06.021. Epub 2017 Jun 20.
Migration and travel are major drivers of the spread of infectious diseases. Geographic proximity and a common language facilitate travel and migration in Mesoamerica, which in turn could affect the spread of HIV in the region.
6092 HIV-1 subtype B partial pol sequences sampled from unique antiretroviral treatment-naïve individuals from Mexico (40.7%), Guatemala (24.4%), Honduras (19%), Panama (8.2%), Nicaragua (5.5%), Belize (1.4%), and El Salvador (0.7%) between 2011 and 2016 were included. Phylogenetic and genetic network analyses were performed to infer putative relationships between HIV sequences. The demographic and geographic associations with clustering were analyzed and viral migration patterns were inferred using the Slatkin-Maddison approach on 100 iterations of random subsets of equal number of sequences per location.
A total of 1685/6088 (27.7%) of sequences linked with at least one other sequence, forming 603 putative transmission clusters (range: 2-89 individuals). Clustering individuals were significantly more likely to be younger (median age 29 vs 33years, p<0.01) and men-who-have-sex-with-men (40.4% vs 30.3%, p<0.01). Of the 603 clusters, 30 (5%) included sequences from multiple countries with commonly observed linkages between Mexican and Honduran sequences. Eight of the 603 clusters included >10 individuals, including two comprised exclusively of Guatemalans (52 and 89 individuals). Phylogenetic and migration analyses suggested that the Central and Southern regions of Mexico along with Belize were major sources of HIV throughout the region (p<0.01) with genetic flow southward from Mexico to the other nations of Mesoamerica. We also found evidence of significant viral migration within Mexico.
International clusters were infrequent, suggesting moderate migration between HIV epidemics of the different Mesoamerican countries. Nevertheless, we observed important sources of transnational HIV spread in the region, including Southern and Central Mexico and Belize.
移民和旅行是传染病传播的主要驱动因素。地理上的接近和共同语言促进了中美洲的旅行和移民,这反过来可能会影响该地区艾滋病毒的传播。
纳入了2011年至2016年间从墨西哥(40.7%)、危地马拉(24.4%)、洪都拉斯(19%)、巴拿马(8.2%)、尼加拉瓜(5.5%)、伯利兹(1.4%)和萨尔瓦多(0.7%)未接受过抗逆转录病毒治疗的独特个体中采集的6092个HIV-1 B亚型部分pol序列。进行了系统发育和遗传网络分析以推断HIV序列之间的假定关系。分析了与聚类相关的人口统计学和地理关联,并使用Slatkin-Maddison方法对每个地点等数量序列的随机子集进行100次迭代,推断病毒迁移模式。
共有1685/6088(27.7%)的序列与至少一个其他序列相关联,形成了603个假定的传播簇(范围:2 - 89人)。聚类个体更有可能较年轻(中位年龄29岁对33岁,p<0.01)且为男男性行为者(40.4%对30.3%,p<0.01)。在603个簇中,30个(5%)包括来自多个国家的序列,墨西哥和洪都拉斯序列之间存在常见的联系。603个簇中有8个包含超过10个人,其中两个完全由危地马拉人组成(分别为52人和89人)。系统发育和迁移分析表明,墨西哥的中部和南部地区以及伯利兹是整个地区艾滋病毒的主要来源(p<0.01),存在从墨西哥向南到中美洲其他国家的基因流动。我们还发现了墨西哥境内显著病毒迁移的证据。
国际簇很少见,表明中美洲不同国家的艾滋病毒流行之间的迁移程度适中。然而,我们观察到该地区跨国艾滋病毒传播的重要来源,包括墨西哥南部和中部以及伯利兹。