Division of Infectious Diseases, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Clin Infect Dis. 2019 Aug 16;69(5):853-860. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciy1006.
Understanding sexual networks involving acute human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 infections (AHI) may lead to prevention opportunities to mitigate high rates of onward transmission. We evaluated HIV-1 phylogenetic and behavioral characteristics among persons with AHI and their referred partners.
Between 2012 and 2014, 46 persons with AHI in Malawi participated in a combined behavioral and biomedical intervention. Participants referred sexual partners by passive referral. Demographics and sexual behaviors were collected through interviews and HIV-1 genetic relationships were assessed with phylogenetics.
Among 45 AHI participants with HIV-1 sequences, none was phylogenetically-linked with another AHI index. There were 19 (42%) AHI participants who referred a single partner that returned for testing. Most partners (n = 17) were HIV-infected, with 15 (88%) presenting with an established infection. There were 14 index-partner pairs that had sequences available; 13 (93%) pairs were phylogenetically-linked dyads. The AHI index was female in 7/13 (54%) dyads. Age-disparate relationships among dyads were common (≥5-year age difference in 67% of dyads), including 3/6 dyads involving a male index and a younger woman. Index participants with a referred partner were more likely to report no casual partners and to be living with their current partner than participants not in dyads.
Passive-partner referral successfully identified partners with genetically-similar HIV infections-the likely source of infection-but only 40% of index cases referred partners who presented for HIV-1 testing. Future work evaluating assisted partner notification may help reach susceptible partners or more people with untreated HIV-1 infections connected to acute transmission.
NCT01450189.
了解涉及急性人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)-1 感染(AHI)的性网络可能会为预防提供机会,以减轻高传播率。我们评估了 AHI 患者及其转介伴侣的 HIV-1 系统发生和行为特征。
2012 年至 2014 年期间,马拉维的 46 名 AHI 患者参与了一项联合行为和生物医学干预。参与者通过被动转介转介性伴侣。通过访谈收集人口统计学和性行为数据,并通过系统发生学评估 HIV-1 遗传关系。
在 45 名具有 HIV-1 序列的 AHI 参与者中,没有一个与另一个 AHI 索引具有系统发生联系。有 19 名(42%)AHI 参与者转介了一名返回检测的单一伴侣。大多数伴侣(n = 17)均感染 HIV,其中 15 名(88%)为已确诊感染。有 14 对索引-伴侣对具有可用序列;13 对(93%)对为系统发生上相关的对子。13 对(93%)中的 7 对(54%)对中,AHI 索引为女性。对子之间的年龄差异很大(67%的对子中年龄相差≥5 岁),包括 3 对涉及男性索引和年轻女性的对子。有转介伴侣的索引参与者比不在对子中的参与者更有可能报告没有偶然伴侣并且与当前伴侣同居。
被动伴侣转介成功识别出具有遗传相似 HIV 感染的伴侣-可能的感染源-但只有 40%的索引病例转介了伴侣进行 HIV-1 检测。未来评估辅助伙伴通知的工作可能有助于接触易感染的伴侣或更多与急性传播相关的未经治疗的 HIV-1 感染者。
NCT01450189。