aCentre for Geographic Medicine Research-Coast, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Kilifi, Kenya bUniversity of Oxford, Headington, UK cInternational AIDS Vaccine Initiative, New York City, New York dDepartment of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA eProject San Francisco, Kigali, Rwanda fUganda Research Unit on AIDS, Medical Research Council/Uganda Virus Research Institute, Entebbe, Uganda gZambia Emory Research Project, Lusaka, Zambia hDesmond Tutu HIV Centre, University of Cape Town, South Africa iKenya AIDS Vaccine Initiative, Nairobi, Kenya jDepartment of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
AIDS. 2017 Nov 28;31(18):2541-2546. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000001659.
Symptoms of acute retroviral syndrome (ARS) may be used to identify patients with acute HIV-1 infection who seek care. ARS symptoms in African adults differ by region. We assessed whether reporting of ARS was associated with HIV-1 subtype in a multicentre African cohort study representing countries with predominant HIV-1 subtypes A, C, and D.
ARS symptoms were assessed in adults enrolling within 6 weeks after the estimated date of infection in an acute and early HIV-1 infection cohort study. HIV-1 subtype was determined by POL genotyping. We used log-binomial regression to compare ARS symptom prevalence among those with subtype A vs. C or D, adjusting for sex, time since enrolment, and enrolment viral load.
Among 183 volunteers ascertained within 6 weeks after estimated date of infection, 77 (42.0%) had subtype A, 83 (45.4%) subtype C, and 23 (12.6%) subtype D infection. Individuals with subtype A were 1.40 (95% confidence interval: 1.17, 1.68) times as likely as individuals with subtypes C or D to report any ARS symptoms; each individual symptom other than rash was also more prevalent in subtype A than in subtype C or D, with prevalence ratios ranging from 1.94 (1.40, 2.70) for headache to 4.92 (2.24, 10.78) for lymphadenopathy.
Individuals with subtype A were significantly more likely than individuals with subtypes C or D to report any ARS symptoms. HIV-1 subtypes may help explain differences in ARS that have been observed across regions in Africa, and may impact the yield of symptom-based screening strategies for acute HIV infection detection.
急性逆转录病毒综合征 (ARS) 的症状可用于识别寻求医疗的急性 HIV-1 感染者。非洲成年人的 ARS 症状因地区而异。我们评估了在一个代表以 HIV-1 亚型 A、C 和 D 为主的非洲国家的多中心非洲队列研究中,报告 ARS 是否与 HIV-1 亚型相关。
在急性和早期 HIV-1 感染队列研究中,在估计感染日期后 6 周内招募的成年人中评估 ARS 症状。通过 POL 基因分型确定 HIV-1 亚型。我们使用对数二项式回归比较了亚型 A 与 C 或 D 之间 ARS 症状的流行率,调整了性别、登记后时间和登记病毒载量。
在估计感染日期后 6 周内确定的 183 名志愿者中,77 名(42.0%)感染了亚型 A,83 名(45.4%)感染了亚型 C,23 名(12.6%)感染了亚型 D。与亚型 C 或 D 相比,感染亚型 A 的个体报告任何 ARS 症状的可能性高 1.40 倍(95%置信区间:1.17,1.68);除皮疹外,每种个体症状在亚型 A 中的流行率也高于亚型 C 或 D,流行率比范围为 1.94(1.40,2.70),从头痛到淋巴结病为 4.92(2.24,10.78)。
与感染亚型 C 或 D 的个体相比,感染亚型 A 的个体更有可能报告任何 ARS 症状。HIV-1 亚型可能有助于解释非洲不同地区观察到的 ARS 差异,并可能影响基于症状的急性 HIV 感染检测筛查策略的效果。