Weiss Kevin M, Goodreau Steven M, Morris Martina, Prasad Pragati, Ramaraju Ramya, Sanchez Travis, Jenness Samuel M
Department of Epidemiology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States.
Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States.
Epidemics. 2020 Jan 24;30:100386. doi: 10.1016/j.epidem.2020.100386.
In this paper, we present an overview and descriptive results from one of the first egocentric network studies of men who have sex with men (MSM) from across the United States: the ARTnet study. ARTnet was designed to support prevention research for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) that are transmitted across partnership networks. ARTnet implemented a population-based egocentric network study design that sampled egos from the target population and asked them to report on the number, attributes, and timing of their sexual partnerships. Such data provide the foundation needed for parameterizing stochastic network models that are used for disease projection and intervention planning. ARTnet collected data online from 2017 to 2019, with a final sample of 4904 participants who reported on 16198 sexual partnerships. The aims of this paper were to characterize the joint distribution of three network parameters needed for modeling: degree distributions, assortative mixing, and partnership age, with heterogeneity by partnership type (main, casual and one-time), demography, and geography. Participants had an average of 1.19 currently active partnerships ("mean degree"), which was higher for casual partnerships (0.74) than main partnerships (0.45). The mean rate of one-time partnership acquisition was 0.16 per week (8.5 partners per year). Main partnerships lasted 272.5 weeks on average, while casual partnerships lasted 133.0 weeks. There was strong but heterogenous assortative mixing by race/ethnicity for all groups. The mean absolute age difference for all partnership types was 9.5 years, with main partners differing by 6.3 years compared to 10.8 years for casual partners. Our analysis suggests that MSM may be at sustained risk for HIV/STI acquisition and transmission through high network degree of sexual partnerships. The ARTnet network study provides a robust and reproducible foundation for understanding the dynamics of HIV/STI epidemiology among U.S. MSM and supporting the implementation science that seeks to address persistent challenges in HIV/STI prevention.
在本文中,我们展示了美国首批针对男男性行为者(MSM)的以自我为中心的网络研究之一——ARTnet研究的概述及描述性结果。ARTnet旨在支持针对通过性伙伴网络传播的人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)和其他性传播感染(STIs)的预防研究。ARTnet实施了基于人群的以自我为中心的网络研究设计,从目标人群中抽取自我样本,并要求他们报告其性伙伴的数量、特征及建立时间。此类数据为参数化用于疾病预测和干预规划的随机网络模型提供了所需基础。ARTnet在2017年至2019年期间通过在线方式收集数据,最终样本为4904名参与者,他们报告了16198个性伙伴关系。本文的目的是描述建模所需的三个网络参数的联合分布:度分布、同配混合和伙伴关系年龄,并按伙伴关系类型(主要、偶然和一次性)、人口统计学和地理位置进行异质性分析。参与者平均有1.19个当前活跃的性伙伴关系(“平均度”),偶然性伙伴关系(0.74)的这一数值高于主要性伙伴关系(0.45)。一次性性伙伴关系的平均获得率为每周0.16个(每年8.5个伙伴)。主要性伙伴关系平均持续272.5周,而偶然性伙伴关系持续133.0周。所有群体在种族/族裔方面存在强烈但异质的同配混合。所有性伙伴关系类型的平均绝对年龄差为9.5岁,主要性伙伴的年龄差为6.3岁,而偶然性伙伴的年龄差为10.8岁。我们的分析表明,男男性行为者可能因性伙伴关系网络度高而持续面临感染和传播HIV/STIs的风险。ARTnet网络研究为理解美国男男性行为者中HIV/STIs流行病学动态以及支持旨在应对HIV/STIs预防中持续挑战的实施科学提供了一个强大且可重复的基础。