Boily M C, Anderson R M
Epidemiology Research Group, Centre de recherche, Hôpital du St-Sacrement, Québec, Canada.
Sex Transm Dis. 1996 Jul-Aug;23(4):312-32. doi: 10.1097/00007435-199607000-00012.
Studies have reported that infection with certain sexually transmitted diseases (STD), such as chancroid, gonorrhea, and genital herpes, enhances the probability of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission by sexual contact with an infected partner. Epidemiologic studies vary in design from longitudinal to cross-sectional, with varying periods of follow-up or retrospective history of exposure to STD. The major difficulty in assessing the results of past work centers on the validity and precision of widely used measures of association, such as relative risk (RR) and odds ratio (OR), in situations in which common behavior (e.g., different facets of sexual behavior) underpins the acquisition of both the STD cofactor and HIV.
To evaluate the quality of the cumulative incidence ratio (CIR), the hazard rate ratio (HRR), and the prevalence ratio (PR) as measures of association to estimate and test the increase in HIV transmission probabilities caused by the STD.
The study is based on a proportional hazard stochastic model of concomitant HIV and STD cofactor transmission. Analysis was performed using Monte-Carlo simulation.
Estimates of the HIV-STD association by the CIR, HRR, and PR, adjusted and nonadjusted for sexual activity, are shown to have poor validity and great variability. The adjusted CIR, HRR, and PR tend to underestimate the strength of the true association (specified in the model) in both longitudinal and cross-sectional designs. In the absence an HIV-STD association, the PR tends to overestimate the magnitude, whereas the CIR and HRR may either underestimate or overestimate it in longitudinal studies. These results have direct consequences on the reliability of the test of association showing both a lack of specificity (empirical type I error) and sensitivity (empirical power). Some reasons contributing to the bias in the estimates of the measures of association are the presence of confounding variables, namely the frequency of change of sex partner and the mixing pattern between sexual activity classes, as well as the adopted definition of exposure to the STD cofactor and the prevalence of both HIV and the STD cofactor.
The precision of estimates and reliability of the test of HIV-STD association could be improved through longitudinal studies using more careful definition and measurement of exposure to the STD cofactor and larger sample sizes permitting finer stratification of sexual behavior and a sufficient number of persons per stratum.
研究报告称,感染某些性传播疾病(STD),如软下疳、淋病和生殖器疱疹,会增加通过与感染伴侣进行性接触传播人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的概率。流行病学研究的设计从纵向到横断面各不相同,随访期或STD暴露回顾史也各不相同。评估过去研究结果的主要困难在于,在常见行为(如性行为的不同方面)是获得STD辅助因素和HIV的共同基础的情况下,广泛使用的关联度量(如相对风险(RR)和比值比(OR))的有效性和精确性。
评估累积发病率比(CIR)、风险率比(HRR)和患病率比(PR)作为关联度量的质量,以估计和检验由STD导致的HIV传播概率的增加。
该研究基于HIV和STD辅助因素伴随传播的比例风险随机模型。使用蒙特卡罗模拟进行分析。
经性活动调整和未经调整的CIR、HRR和PR对HIV-STD关联的估计显示出有效性差和变异性大的问题。在纵向和横断面设计中,经调整的CIR、HRR和PR往往低估了真实关联(模型中指定的)强度。在不存在HIV-STD关联的情况下,PR往往高估关联程度,而在纵向研究中,CIR和HRR可能低估或高估关联程度。这些结果对关联检验的可靠性有直接影响,表现为缺乏特异性(经验性I类错误)和敏感性(经验性检验效能)。导致关联度量估计偏差的一些原因包括混杂变量的存在,即性伴侣更换频率和性活动类别之间的混合模式,以及所采用的STD辅助因素暴露定义和HIV及STD辅助因素的患病率。
通过纵向研究,更仔细地定义和测量STD辅助因素暴露,并使用更大的样本量以便对性行为进行更精细的分层以及每层有足够数量的个体,可以提高HIV-STD关联估计的精确性和检验的可靠性。