Nduva George M, Otieno Frederick, Kimani Joshua, Wahome Elizabeth, McKinnon Lyle R, Cholette Francois, Majiwa Maxwell, Masika Moses, Mutua Gaudensia, Anzala Omu, Graham Susan M, Gelmon Larry, Price Matt A, Smith Adrian D, Bailey Robert C, Baele Guy, Lemey Philippe, Hassan Amin S, Sanders Eduard J, Esbjörnsson Joakim
Department of Translational Medicine, Lund University, Faculty of Medicine, Lund University, Box 117 SE-221 00 Lund, Sweden.
Nyanza Reproductive Health Society, United Mall, P.O. Box 1764, Kisumu, Kenya.
Virus Evol. 2022 Mar 3;8(1):veac016. doi: 10.1093/ve/veac016. eCollection 2022.
In Kenya, HIV-1 key populations including men having sex with men (MSM), people who inject drugs (PWID) and female sex workers (FSW) are thought to significantly contribute to HIV-1 transmission in the wider, mostly heterosexual (HET) HIV-1 transmission network. However, clear data on HIV-1 transmission dynamics within and between these groups are limited. We aimed to empirically quantify rates of HIV-1 flow between key populations and the HET population, as well as between different geographic regions to determine HIV-1 'hotspots' and their contribution to HIV-1 transmission in Kenya. We used maximum-likelihood phylogenetic and Bayesian inference to analyse 4058 HIV-1 sequences (representing 0.3 per cent of the epidemic in Kenya) sampled 1986-2019 from individuals of different risk groups and regions in Kenya. We found 89 per cent within-risk group transmission and 11 per cent mixing between risk groups, cyclic HIV-1 exchange between adjoining geographic provinces and strong evidence of HIV-1 dissemination from (i) West-to-East (i.e. higher-to-lower HIV-1 prevalence regions), and (ii) heterosexual-to-key populations. Low HIV-1 prevalence regions and key populations are sinks rather than major sources of HIV-1 transmission in Kenya. Targeting key populations in Kenya needs to occur concurrently with strengthening interventions in the general epidemic.
在肯尼亚,包括男男性行为者(MSM)、注射吸毒者(PWID)和女性性工作者(FSW)在内的HIV-1重点人群被认为在更广泛的、主要为异性传播的HIV-1传播网络中对HIV-1传播有显著贡献。然而,关于这些群体内部以及群体之间HIV-1传播动态的明确数据有限。我们旨在通过实证量化重点人群与异性传播人群之间以及不同地理区域之间的HIV-1传播率,以确定HIV-1“热点地区”及其对肯尼亚HIV-1传播的贡献。我们使用最大似然系统发育分析和贝叶斯推断,对1986年至2019年期间从肯尼亚不同风险群体和地区的个体中采集的4058条HIV-1序列(占肯尼亚疫情的0.3%)进行分析。我们发现风险群体内部传播占89%,风险群体之间混合传播占11%,相邻地理省份之间存在周期性HIV-1交换,并有强有力的证据表明HIV-1从(i)西部向东部(即HIV-1流行率较高地区向较低地区)以及(ii)异性传播人群向重点人群传播。在肯尼亚,HIV-1低流行地区和重点人群是HIV-1传播的接受端而非主要源头。在肯尼亚针对重点人群开展工作的同时,需要加强对总体疫情的干预措施。