| Literature DB >> 24595023 |
Mary K Grabowski1, Justin Lessler1, Andrew D Redd2, Joseph Kagaayi3, Oliver Laeyendecker4, Anthony Ndyanabo3, Martha I Nelson5, Derek A T Cummings1, John Baptiste Bwanika3, Amy C Mueller6, Steven J Reynolds7, Supriya Munshaw6, Stuart C Ray6, Tom Lutalo3, Jordyn Manucci6, Aaron A R Tobian8, Larry W Chang9, Chris Beyrer1, Jacky M Jennings6, Fred Nalugoda3, David Serwadda10, Maria J Wawer11, Thomas C Quinn12, Ronald H Gray11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is often assumed that local sexual networks play a dominant role in HIV spread in sub-Saharan Africa. The aim of this study was to determine the extent to which continued HIV transmission in rural communities--home to two-thirds of the African population--is driven by intra-community sexual networks versus viral introductions from outside of communities. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24595023 PMCID: PMC3942316 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001610
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Figure 1Rakai District, Uganda.
(A) Rakai (∼2,200 km2), a rural district in southwest Uganda, with population ∼450,000 (∼700 communities). RCCS R13 study participants (n = 1,085) reported 1,169 sexual partners with primary residence outside the Rakai District, but within Uganda (where disclosed, residential locations of sexual partners are indicated with red dots on the map). Only three sexual partners were reported to be living outside Uganda (two in Tanzania and one in the United Kingdom, not shown). (B) The Rakai district at a higher resolution, with the 11 geographic regions surveyed in RCCS R13 indicated in color. There are two primary highways (Masaka Road to Tanzania and the Trans-African National Highway to Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo [DR of Congo]) and numerous secondary roads that extend throughout the district.
Summary statistics for the 46 Rakai communities (within 11 geographic regions) surveyed in RCCS R13.
| Region | Community | Participants | Female | Married | Households | HIV Seropositive | HIV Seroincident | Person-Years | Incidence per 100 Person-Years |
|
| 14,594 | 8,188 (56.1) | 8,790 (60.2) | 8,899 | 1,786 (12.2) | 189 | 16,159.7 | 1.2 (1.0–1.3) | |
|
| 1 | 198 | 128 (64.6) | 109 (55.1) | 143 | 46 (23.2) | 6 | 163.8 | 3.7 (1.3–8.0) |
| 2 | 543 | 335 (61.7) | 316 (58.2) | 347 | 85 (15.7) | 8 | 518.0 | 1.5 (0.7–3.0) | |
| 3 | 154 | 85 (55.2) | 67 (43.5) | 74 | 18 (11.7) | 3 | 158.4 | 1.9 (0.4–5.5) | |
| 4 | 388 | 227 (58.5) | 224 (57.7) | 249 | 62 (16.0) | 6 | 382.3 | 1.6 (0.6–3.4) | |
| Total | 1,283 | 775 (60.4) | 716 (55.8) | 813 | 211 (16.4) | 23 | 1,222.5 | 1.9 (1.2–2.8) | |
|
| 5 | 400 | 234 (58.5) | 216 (54.0) | 239 | 36 (9.0) | 3 | 419.1 | 0.7 (0.1–2.1) |
| 6 | 414 | 227 (54.8) | 203 (49.0) | 227 | 46 (11.1) | 3 | 453.7 | 0.7 (0.1–1.9) | |
| 7 | 270 | 143 (53.0) | 158 (58.5) | 163 | 36 (13.3) | 6 | 285.6 | 2.1 (0.8–4.6) | |
| 8 | 180 | 96 (53.3) | 110 (61.1) | 116 | 26 (14.4) | 3 | 205.5 | 1.5 (0.3–4.3) | |
| 9 | 207 | 112 (54.1) | 87 (42.0) | 123 | 31 (15.0) | 2 | 209.4 | 1.0 (0.1–3.5) | |
| 10 | 209 | 125 (59.8) | 99 (47.4) | 115 | 19 (9.1) | 2 | 218.2 | 0.9 (0.1–3.3) | |
| Total | 1,680 | 937 (55.8) | 873 (52.0) | 983 | 194 (11.5) | 19 | 1,791.4 | 1.1 (0.6–1.7) | |
|
| 11 | 316 | 170 (53.8) | 214 (67.7) | 188 | 34 (10.8) | 4 | 359.2 | 1.1 (0.3–2.9) |
| 12 | 375 | 202 (53.9) | 205 (54.7) | 207 | 35 (9.3) | 2 | 441.6 | 0.5 (0.1–1.6) | |
| 13 | 176 | 89 (50.6) | 112 (63.6) | 99 | 24 (13.6) | 6 | 178.7 | 3.4 (1.2–7.3) | |
| Total | 867 | 461 (53.2) | 531 (61.2) | 494 | 93 (10.7) | 12 | 979.5 | 1.2 (0.6–2.1) | |
|
| 14 | 379 | 217 (53.3) | 241 (63.6) | 233 | 46 (12.1) | 7 | 431.6 | 1.6 (0.7–3.3) |
| 15 | 262 | 149 (56.9) | 158 (60.3) | 181 | 36 (13.7) | 1 | 251.0 | 0.4 (0.0–2.2) | |
| 16 | 597 | 339 (56.8) | 319 (53.4) | 385 | 51 (8.5) | 6 | 624.1 | 1.0 (0.4–2.1) | |
| 17 | 399 | 223 (55.9) | 240 (60.2) | 229 | 34(8.5) | 2 | 441.3 | 0.5 (0.1–1.6) | |
| Total | 1,637 | 928 (56.7) | 958 (58.5) | 1,028 | 167 (10.2) | 16 | 1,748.1 | 0.9 (0.5–1.5) | |
|
| 18 | 244 | 149 (61.1) | 160 (65.6) | 168 | 50 (20.5) | 5 | 237.4 | 2.1 (0.7–4.9) |
| 19 | 140 | 79 (56.4) | 97 (69.3) | 88 | 28 (20.0) | 3 | 148.2 | 2.0 (0.4–5.9) | |
| 20 | 135 | 88 (65.2) | 82 (60.7) | 99 | 25 (18.5) | 4 | 150.7 | 2.7 (0.7–6.8) | |
| 21 | 222 | 133 (59.9) | 130 (58.6) | 150 | 49 (22.1) | 4 | 221.7 | 1.8 (0.5–4.6) | |
| Total | 741 | 449 (60.6) | 469 (63.3) | 505 | 152 (20.5) | 16 | 757.9 | 2.1 (1.2–3.4) | |
|
| 22 | 428 | 225 (52.6) | 254 (59.3) | 254 | 50 (11.7) | 4 | 496.8 | 0.8 (0.2–2.1) |
| 23 | 332 | 177 (53.3) | 205 (61.7) | 205 | 48 (14.5) | 5 | 392.6 | 1.3 (0.4–3.0) | |
| 24 | 771 | 428 (55.5) | 448 (58.1) | 458 | 79 (10.2) | 7 | 922.8 | 0.8 (0.3–1.6) | |
| 25 | 504 | 267 (53.0) | 317 (62.9) | 295 | 56 (11.1) | 3 | 592.7 | 0.5 (0.1–1.5) | |
| Total | 2,035 | 1,097 (53.9) | 1,224 (60.1) | 1,212 | 233 (11.4) | 19 | 2,404.9 | 0.8 (0.5–1.2) | |
|
| 26 | 298 | 170 (57.0) | 204 (68.5) | 176 | 34 (11.4) | 4 | 353.6 | 1.1 (0.3–2.9) |
| 27 | 456 | 258 (56.6) | 284 (62.3) | 278 | 36 (7.9) | 4 | 523.8 | 0.8 (0.2–2.0) | |
| 28 | 581 | 326 (56.1) | 364 (62.7) | 338 | 47 (8.1) | 4 | 703.6 | 0.6 (0.2–1.5) | |
| 29 | 251 | 132 (52.6) | 176 (70.1) | 148 | 28 (11.2) | 3 | 300.8 | 1.0 (0.2–2.9) | |
| 30 | 194 | 105 (54.1) | 130 (67.0) | 118 | 28 (14.4) | 3 | 219.7 | 1.4 (0.3–4.0) | |
| Total | 1,780 | 991 (55.7) | 1,158 (65.1) | 1,058 | 173 (9.7) | 18 | 2,101.6 | 0.9 (0.5–1.4) | |
|
| 31 | 642 | 343 (53.4) | 371 (57.8) | 364 | 52 (8.1) | 11 | 776.9 | 1.4 (0.7–2.5) |
| 32 | 185 | 95 (51.4) | 92 (49.7) | 108 | 16 (8.6) | 3 | 221.9 | 1.4 (0.3–4.0) | |
| 33 | 720 | 405 (56.2) | 469 (65.1) | 413 | 105 (14.6) | 10 | 857.2 | 1.2 (0.6–2.1) | |
| Total | 1,547 | 843 (54.5) | 932 (60.2) | 885 | 173 (11.2) | 24 | 1,856.1 | 1.3 (0.8–1.9) | |
|
| 34 | 507 | 276 (54.4) | 316 (62.3) | 327 | 60 (11.8) | 10 | 625.5 | 1.6 (0.8–2.9) |
| 35 | 340 | 194 (57.1) | 220 (64.7) | 240 | 52 (15.3) | 5 | 345.5 | 1.4 (0.5–3.4) | |
| 36 | 191 | 100 (52.4) | 120 (62.8) | 102 | 15 (7.9) | 3 | 199.4 | 1.5 (0.3–4.4) | |
| 37 | 75 | 43 (57.3) | 41 (54.7) | 51 | 11 (14.7) | 2 | 77.7 | 2.6 (0.3–9.3) | |
| 38 | 250 | 142 (56.8) | 145 (58.0) | 148 | 40 (16.0) | 1 | 243.8 | 0.4 (0.0–2.3) | |
| 39 | 76 | 47 (61.8) | 39 (51.3) | 44 | 10 (13.2) | 1 | 78.1 | 1.3 (0.0–7.1) | |
| 40 | 320 | 184 (57.5) | 205 (64.1) | 200 | 49 (15.3) | 5 | 342.5 | 1.5 (0.5–3.4) | |
| 41 | 180 | 107 (59.4) | 106 (58.9) | 108 | 11 (6.1) | 0 | 180.4 | — | |
| Total | 1,939 | 1,093 (56.4) | 1,192 (61.5) | 1,220 | 248 (12.8) | 27 | 2,092.9 | 1.3 (0.9–1.9) | |
|
| 42 | 569 | 312 (54.8) | 426 (74.9) | 360 | 45 (7.9) | 4 | 680.4 | 0.6 (0.2–1.5) |
| 43 | 168 | 88 (52.4) | 115 (68.5) | 122 | 30 (17.9) | 3 | 179.0 | 1.7 (0.3–4.9) | |
| 44 | 142 | 84 (59.2) | 86 (60.6) | 88 | 18 (12.7) | 4 | 163.5 | 2.4 (0.7–6.3) | |
| Total | 879 | 484 (55.1) | 627 (71.3) | 570 | 93 (10.6) | 11 | 1,022.9 | 1.1 (0.5–1.9) | |
|
| 45 | 100 | 64 (64.0) | 53 (53.0) | 66 | 27 (27.0) | 4 | 85.7 | 4.7 (1.3–12.0) |
| 46 | 106 | 66 (62.3) | 57 (53.8) | 65 | 22 (20.8) | 0 | 96.2 | — | |
| Total | 206 | 130 (63.1) | 110 (53.4) | 131 | 49 (23.8) | 4 | 181.9 | 2.2 (0.6–5.6) |
Married refers to currently married individuals and includes married monogamous and married polygamous individuals.
Calculated using Poisson regression and assuming that HIV seroconversion occurred at the midpoint of the follow-up interval.
Figure 2Spatial clustering of HIV-seropositive persons within households (0 km) and in geographic windows of 250 m up to 10 km (the first window is 10–250 m, and windows are centered every 50 m starting at 125 m).
Spatial clustering analyses show whether HIV prevalence or incidence is elevated within certain distances of other HIV-seropositive persons. We define the spatial clustering of HIV-seropositive individuals as τ(d 1,d 2), the relative probability that an HIV-seropositive person resides within a distance window, d 1 to d 2, from another HIV-seropositive person compared to the probability that any individual is HIV seropositive in the entire study population. Where spatial clustering exists, values of τ(d 1,d 2) exceed one. Shaded areas show the 95% bootstrapped confidence intervals for spatial clustering estimates. (A) The spatial clustering between HIV-seropositive persons (prevalent or incident cases with other prevalent or incident cases; red). (B) The spatial clustering of HIV-seroincident cases with ART-naïve HIV-seroprevalent persons (yellow). (C) The spatial clustering of HIV-seroincident cases with other HIV-seroincident cases (blue). (D) A blowup of the area where significant extra-household spatial clustering (<500 m) was identified among all HIV-seropositive persons (marked with black box in [A–C]). Data are shown only up to 10 km (no significant spatial clustering was observed beyond this distance).
Figure 3Maximum likelihood phylogenetic analyses of the HIV-1 gag gene.
(A) Boxplots of the intra-subtype gag genetic pairwise distances for epidemiologically linked (Epi linked) incident couples (i.e., at least one member of the couple was an incident case) and for all epidemiologically unlinked incident pairs of individuals in RCCS R13. (B) Boxplots of intra-subtype gag genetic pairwise distances by the geographic distance between the incident pair. (C) A ML phylogenetic tree (radial) of HIV-1 subtype A gag sequences from HIV-seroprevalent (n = 245) and HIV-incident (n = 55) cases, where taxa are colored by the geographic region from which they were isolated. Reference strains (n = 87) are in black. Grey circles indicate nodes with bootstrap support of ≥70%; black circles indicate intra-household clusters; † indicates an intra-household virus also sharing a cluster with at least one other household. Additional radial and rectangular phylogenetic trees for HIV-1 subtypes A, D, and C for gag and env genes are included in Figures S5, S6, S7, S8, S9, S10, S11, S12, S13.
Characteristics of 95 phylogenetic clusters identified in maximum likelihood phylogenetic analyses (HKY-85) of 915 gag sequences and 1,026 env sequences obtained from 1,099 HIV-infected participants in RCCS R13.
| Cluster Characteristic | Reference Unit | All Phylogenetic Clusters ( | Phylogenetic Clusters with Incident Case(s) ( |
| Cluster size distribution | Number of participants in cluster (frequency) | 2 (82), 3 (9), 4 (2), 5 (2) | 2 (30), 3 (5), 4 (1), 5 (2) |
| Clusters containing only incident cases | Number of clusters (percent of total clusters) | 6 (6.3) | 6 (15.8) |
| Household clusters | Number of clusters (percent of total clusters) | 42 (44.2) | 18 (47.4) |
| Intra-community clusters | Number of clusters (percent of total clusters) | 15 (15.8) | 7 (18.4) |
| Cross-community clusters | Number of clusters (percent of total clusters) | 38 (40.0) | 13 (34.2) |
| Cross-regional clusters | Number of clusters (percent of total clusters) | 18 (18.9) | 6 (15.8) |
Categories not mutually exclusive.
Refers to clusters of two individuals who shared the same household.
Refers to clusters of two or more individuals who spanned households but shared the same community.
Refers to clusters of two or more individuals who spanned households and communities.
Refers to clusters of two or more individuals who spanned households, communities, and geographic regions.
Descriptive characteristics of HIV-seronegative and -incident participants in egocentric partner analysis (n = 9,520).
| Characteristic | Women ( | Men ( | ||
| HIV-Seronegative | HIV-Incident | HIV-Seronegative | HIV-Incident | |
|
| 5,258 (98.0) | 110 (2.0) | 4,073 (98.1) | 79 (1.9) |
|
| ||||
| 15–19 y | 290 (5.5) | 6 (5.5) | 320 (7.9) | 2 (2.5) |
| 20–24 y | 921 (17.5) | 25 (22.7) | 677 (16.6) | 12 (15.2) |
| 25–29 y | 1,287 (24.5) | 25 (22.7) | 820 (20.1) | 20 (25.3) |
| 30–34 y | 1,095 (20.8) | 31 (28.2) | 792 (19.4) | 22 (27.8) |
| 35–39 y | 710 (13.5) | 13 (11.8) | 681 (16.7) | 14 (17.7) |
| 40+ y | 955 (18.2) | 10 (9.1) | 783 (19.2) | 9 (11.4) |
|
| ||||
| Never married | 590 (11.2) | 19 (17.2) | 906 (22.2) | 11 (13.9) |
| Unmarried, previously married | 779 (14.8) | 34 (30.9) | 311 (7.3) | 14 (17.7) |
| Married, not polygamous | 2,935 (55.8) | 39 (35.5) | 2,418 (59.4) | 45 (57.0) |
| Married, polygamous | 954 (18.1) | 18 (16.4) | 438 (10.8) | 9 (11.4) |
|
| ||||
| 1 | 5,060 (96.2) | 99 (90.0) | 2,425 (59.5) | 33 (41.8) |
| 2 | 189 (3.6) | 8 (7.2) | 1,165 (28.6) | 30 (40.0) |
| 3–4 | 9 (0.2) | 3 (2.7) | 483 (11.9) | 16 (20.2) |
|
| ||||
| Household only | 3,907 (74.3) | 59 (53.6) | 1,918 (47.1) | 27 (34.2) |
| Community only | 554 (10.5) | 12 (10.9) | 559 (13.7) | 13 (16.5) |
| Extra-community only | 644 (12.2) | 33 (30.0) | 371 (9.1) | 5 (6.3) |
| Household and community | 73 (1.4) | 2 (1.8) | 564 (13.8) | 10 (12.7) |
| Household and extra-community | 44 (0.8) | 1 (0.9) | 411 (10.1) | 14 (17.7) |
| Community and extra-community | 33 (0.6) | 3 (2.7) | 159 (3.9) | 5 (6.3) |
| Household, community, and extra-community | 3 (0.1) | 0 (0.0) | 91 (2.2) | 5 (6.3) |
|
| ||||
| HIV seronegative | 2,274 (43.2) | 10 (9.1) | 2,361 (58.0) | 16 (20.2) |
| ART naïve, HIV incident | 16 (0.3) | 9 (8.2) | 8 (0.2) | 9 (11.4) |
| ART naïve, HIV seroprevalent | 101 (1.9) | 18 (16.4) | 91 (2.2) | 19 (24.1) |
| Using ART | 14 (0.2) | 0 (0.0) | 14 (0.3) | 1 (1.2) |
| Missing HIV serostatus | 2,928 (55.7) | 76 (69.0) | 2,640 (63.3) | 64 (81.0) |
“Married, polygamous” for women refers to a woman in a marital relationship with a man who has multiple wives.
Self-reported sexual partners from the egocentric partnership block of the RCCS study questionnaire (records up to four partners in the last 12 mo).
Categories not mutually exclusive (i.e., participants may report multiple partners with different HIV serostatus).
Partners were considered to be on ART if they were using ART for 50% or more of the corresponding index participant's time at risk.
Partner on ART for 58% of the newly infected index participant's time at risk (previous to current survey interval).
Attributable HIV transmissions by geographic location of sexual partner and gender of newly infected participant (estimated from egocentric transmission model).
| HIV Status of Partner | Residential Location of Partner with Respect to Incident Case | Men ( | Women ( | Overall ( | |||
| Attributable Fraction | 95% CI | Attributable Fraction | 95% CI | Attributable Fraction | 95% CI | ||
| ART naïve, HIV seroprevalent | Household | 21.0% | 17.7%–22.8% | 16.1% | 14.6%–16.4% | 18.1% | 16.4%–19.1% |
| ART naïve, HIV incident | Household | 4.1% | 1.3%–7.6% | 5.2% | 2.7%–7.3% | 4.7% | 4.2%–4.8% |
| Missing HIV status | Household | 15.8% | 10.1%–21.5% | 16.6% | 10.9%–20.9% | 16.2% | 11.6%–20.1% |
| Missing HIV status | Extra-household, intra-community | 21.7% | 15.2%–27.9% | 10.2% | 6.4%–13.6% | 15.0% | 11.1%–18.5% |
| Missing HIV status | Extra-household, extra-community | 16.1% | 7.8%–22.3% | 30.6% | 27.3%–33.6% | 24.6% | 20.1%–28.0% |
| Unknown contacts/sources | Unknown location | 21.5% | 12.7%–32.9% | 21.4% | 14.6%–30.0% | 21.4% | 14.8%–29.6% |
| Household total | 39.0% | 32.3%–43.9% | |||||
| Extra-household total | 39.5% | 33.9%–42.3% | |||||
Estimate includes infections attributable to ART-naïve HIV-prevalent and -incident cases and household partners with missing HIV status.
Estimate includes extra-household, intra-community, and extra-community partners.
Probability of HIV infection by partner type over 18-mo study interval.
| Partner Type | Probability of HIV-Infection | 95% CI |
| ART-naïve, HIV-incident partner | 26.0% | 13.4%–43.0% |
| ART-naïve, HIV-seroprevalent partner | 15.3% | 10.9%–20.6% |
| Household partner with unknown HIV serostatus | 1.1% | 0.7%–1.7% |
| Community partner with unknown HIV serostatus | 1.3% | 0.8%–2.0% |
| Extra-community partner with unknown HIV serostatus, for women | 4.2% | 3.0%–5.9% |
| Extra-community partner with unknown HIV serostatus, for men | 0.9% | 0.3%–1.8% |
| Unknown contacts/undisclosed partners | 0.3% | 0.2%–0.5% |
99% of partnerships were intra-household.
Figure 4Summary of inferential methods and study results and conclusions.
The dotted blue line represents the border of a hypothetical community.