Zhang Huize, Chen Guoren, Ma Ping, Lai Yu
School of Basic Medicine, Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Chengdu, China.
Front Microbiol. 2025 Aug 29;16:1622769. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2025.1622769. eCollection 2025.
The co-infection of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and malaria has emerged as an urgent public health challenge in tropical areas where the two diseases geographically converge, stimulating extensive biomedical investigations into their pathobiological interactions. This study aims to elucidate the current status and research trends regarding the interactions between HIV and malaria through bibliometric and visualized analysis.
Research on the interactions between HIV and malaria was collected from the Web of Science Core Collection. Bibliometric analysis and knowledge graph visualization were performed on 4,717 articles published between 1995 and 2024, using CiteSpace software.
The results demonstrate a fluctuating upward pattern in the number of publications related to HIV and malaria interactions. According to the cooperative network visualization analysis, the United States, the University of London, and Grant Dorsey possess the greatest publication counts among all countries, institutions, and authors, respectively. The keyword and cocited reference analysis distinguish the primary research hotspots and frontiers as the epidemiological study of different populations in the African region, pathogenic mechanisms underlying HIV-malaria co-infection, strategies for the prevention and treatment of HIV and malaria co-infection, interactions between antimalarial and antiretroviral drugs, and malaria vaccine responses in HIV-infected individuals.
This bibliometric investigation outlines the research hotspots, frontiers, and trends regarding the interactions between HIV and malaria. Future research should delineate pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic interactions between antimalarial and antiretroviral drugs to enhance clinical efficacy and medication safety and develop effective malaria vaccines that benefit HIV-positive populations in endemic areas.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)与疟疾的合并感染已成为这两种疾病在地理上交汇的热带地区一项紧迫的公共卫生挑战,激发了对它们病理生物学相互作用的广泛生物医学研究。本研究旨在通过文献计量学和可视化分析阐明HIV与疟疾相互作用的现状和研究趋势。
从科学网核心合集收集关于HIV与疟疾相互作用的研究。使用CiteSpace软件对1995年至2024年发表的4717篇文章进行文献计量分析和知识图谱可视化。
结果显示与HIV和疟疾相互作用相关的出版物数量呈波动上升趋势。根据合作网络可视化分析,美国、伦敦大学和格兰特·多尔西在所有国家、机构和作者中分别拥有最多的出版物数量。关键词和共被引参考文献分析将主要研究热点和前沿确定为非洲地区不同人群的流行病学研究、HIV-疟疾合并感染的致病机制、HIV和疟疾合并感染的预防和治疗策略、抗疟药和抗逆转录病毒药物之间的相互作用以及HIV感染者的疟疾疫苗反应。
这项文献计量学调查概述了HIV与疟疾相互作用的研究热点、前沿和趋势。未来的研究应阐明抗疟药和抗逆转录病毒药物之间的药代动力学和药效学相互作用,以提高临床疗效和用药安全性,并开发对流行地区的HIV阳性人群有益的有效疟疾疫苗。