Literature DB >> 26947278

HIV-1 Genetic Variability in Cuba and Implications for Transmission and Clinical Progression.

Madeline Blanco1, Liuber Y Machado, Héctor Díaz, Nancy Ruiz, Dania Romay, Eladio Silva.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Serological and molecular HIV-1 studies in Cuba have shown very low prevalence of seropositivity, but an increasing genetic diversity attributable to introduction of many HIV-1 variants from different areas, exchange of such variants among HIV-positive people with several coinciding routes of infection and other epidemiologic risk factors in the seropositive population. The high HIV-1 genetic variability observed in Cuba has possible implications for transmission and clinical progression. OBJECTIVE Study genetic variability for the HIV-1 env, gag and pol structural genes in Cuba; determine the prevalence of B and non-B subtypes according to epidemiologic and behavioral variables and determine whether a relationship exists between genetic variability and transmissibility, and between genetic variability and clinical disease progression in people living with HIV/AIDS. METHODS Using two molecular assays (heteroduplex mobility assay and nucleic acid sequencing), structural genes were characterized in 590 people with HIV-1 (480 men and 110 women), accounting for 3.4% of seropositive individuals in Cuba as of December 31, 2013. Nonrandom sampling, proportional to HIV prevalence by province, was conducted. Relationships between molecular results and viral factors, host characteristics, and patients' clinical, epidemiologic and behavioral variables were studied for molecular epidemiology, transmission, and progression analyses. RESULTS Molecular analysis of the three HIV-1 structural genes classified 297 samples as subtype B (50.3%), 269 as non-B subtypes (45.6%) and 24 were not typeable. Subtype B prevailed overall and in men, mainly in those who have sex with men. Non-B subtypes were prevalent in women and heterosexual men, showing multiple circulating variants and recombinant forms. Sexual transmission was the predominant form of infection for all. B and non-B subtypes were encountered throughout Cuba. No association was found between subtypes and transmission or clinical progression, although the proportion of deaths was higher for subtype B. Among those who died during the study period, there were no differences between subtypes in the mean time from HIV or AIDS diagnosis to death. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that B and non-B HIV-1 subtypes found in Cuba do not differ in transmissibility and in clinical disease progression. KEYWORDS HIV-1, AIDS, molecular epidemiology, transmissibility, clinical progression, subtypes, circulating recombinant forms, pathogenesis, Cuba.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26947278     DOI: 10.37757/MR2015.V17.N4.6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  MEDICC Rev        ISSN: 1527-3172            Impact factor:   0.583


  3 in total

1.  Molecular Epidemiology of HIV-1 Virus in Puerto Rico: Novel Cases of HIV-1 Subtype C, D, and CRF-24BG.

Authors:  Pablo López; Omayra De Jesús; Yasuhiro Yamamura; Nayra Rodríguez; Andrea Arias; Raphael Sánchez; Yadira Rodríguez; Vivian Tamayo-Agrait; Wilfredo Cuevas; Vanessa Rivera-Amill
Journal:  AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses       Date:  2018-05-23       Impact factor: 2.205

2.  Emergence as an outbreak of the HIV-1 CRF19_cpx variant in treatment-naïve patients in southern Spain.

Authors:  Carmen M González-Domenech; Isabel Viciana; Luis Delaye; María Luisa Mayorga; Rosario Palacios; Javier de la Torre; Francisco Jarilla; Manuel Castaño; Alfonso Del Arco; Encarnación Clavijo; Jesús Santos
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-01-08       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Validation of Variant Assembly Using HAPHPIPE with Next-Generation Sequence Data from Viruses.

Authors:  Keylie M Gibson; Margaret C Steiner; Uzma Rentia; Matthew L Bendall; Marcos Pérez-Losada; Keith A Crandall
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2020-07-14       Impact factor: 5.048

  3 in total

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