School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Herston, Queensland, Australia
School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Herston, Queensland, Australia.
Sex Transm Infect. 2023 Feb;99(1):50-52. doi: 10.1136/sextrans-2021-055241. Epub 2022 May 6.
Human T-cell leukaemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1), an STI, is reported to be highly prevalent in Indigenous communities in Central Australia. HTLV-1 is an incurable, chronic infection which can cause Adult T-cell leukaemia/lymphoma (ATL). ATL is associated with high morbidity and mortality, with limited treatment options. We studied the prevalence of HTLV-1 and ATL in the state of Queensland, Australia.
Serum samples stored at healthcare services in Brisbane, Townsville and Cairns and at haemodialysis units in Brisbane (2018-2019) were screened for HTLV-1/2 antibodies using the Abbott ARCHITECT chemiluminescent microparticle immunoassay (CMIA) for antibodies against gp46-I, gp46-II and GD21 (Abbott CMIA, ARCHITECT). Reactive samples were confirmed through Western blot. Pooled Australian National Cancer Registry surveillance data reporting on cases coded for ATL (2004-2015) were analysed.
Two out of 2000 hospital and health services samples were confirmed HTLV-1-positive (0.1%, 95% CI 0.02% to 0.4%), both in older women, one Indigenous and one non-Indigenous. All 540 haemodialysis samples tested negative for HTLV. All samples were HTLV-2-negative. Ten out of 42 (24.8%) reported cases of ATL in Australia were from Queensland (crude incidence rate 0.025/100 000; 95% CI 0.011 to 0.045); most cases were seen in adult men of non-Indigenous origin. Nineteen deaths due to ATL were recorded in Australia.
We confirm that HTLV-1 and ATL were detected in Queensland in Indigenous and non-Indigenous people. These results highlight the need for HTLV-1 prevalence studies in populations at risk of STIs to allow the implementation of focused public health sexual and mother-to-child transmission prevention strategies.
人 T 细胞白血病病毒 1 型(HTLV-1)是一种性传播感染疾病,据报道在澳大利亚中北部的原住民社区中高度流行。HTLV-1 是一种无法治愈的慢性感染,可导致成人 T 细胞白血病/淋巴瘤(ATL)。ATL 发病率和死亡率高,治疗选择有限。我们研究了澳大利亚昆士兰州的 HTLV-1 和 ATL 流行情况。
2018-2019 年,我们在布里斯班、汤斯维尔和凯恩斯的医疗保健服务机构以及布里斯班的血液透析单位中储存的血清样本,使用雅培 ARCHITECT 化学发光微粒子免疫分析(CMIA)对针对 gp46-I、gp46-II 和 GD21 的抗体进行 HTLV-1/2 抗体筛查(雅培 CMIA,ARCHITECT)。对反应性样本进行了 Western blot 确认。分析了澳大利亚国家癌症登记处报告的 2004-2015 年编码为 ATL 的病例的汇总监测数据。
2000 个医院和卫生服务样本中,有 2 个被确认为 HTLV-1 阳性(0.1%,95%CI 0.02%至 0.4%),均为老年女性,1 例为原住民,1 例为非原住民。所有 540 个血液透析样本均为 HTLV 阴性。所有样本均为 HTLV-2 阴性。澳大利亚报告的 42 例 ATL 病例中有 10 例(24.8%)来自昆士兰州(粗发病率为 0.025/100000;95%CI 0.011 至 0.045);大多数病例发生在非原住民成年男性中。澳大利亚记录了 19 例 ATL 死亡病例。
我们证实 HTLV-1 和 ATL 在昆士兰州的原住民和非原住民中被检出。这些结果强调了在有 STI 风险的人群中进行 HTLV-1 流行情况研究的必要性,以实施针对性的公共卫生性传播和母婴传播预防策略。