| Literature DB >> 28222757 |
Antoine Chaillon1, Asma Essat2, Pierre Frange3,4, Davey M Smith5,6, Constance Delaugerre7, Francis Barin8, Jade Ghosn3,9, Gilles Pialoux10, Olivier Robineau11, Christine Rouzioux3, Cécile Goujard2,12, Laurence Meyer2, Marie-Laure Chaix7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Characterizing HIV-1 transmission networks can be important in understanding the evolutionary patterns and geospatial spread of the epidemic. We reconstructed the broad molecular epidemiology of HIV from individuals with primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) enrolled in France in the ANRS PRIMO C06 cohort over 15 years.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-1; Phylogeography; Primary infection; Transmission network; Treatment as prevention
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28222757 PMCID: PMC5322782 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-017-0339-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Population characteristics at primary infection
| Not clustered individuals | All clustered individuals | Large clustered individuals (≥3 individuals) | p value§ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | 71.5% (969) | 28.5% (387) | 17% (231) | |
| Age (years) | 36 (17–79) | 32.5 (18–68) | 32 (18–64) | p < 0.01 |
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 83.0% (804) | 95.9% (371) | 98.2% (227) | p < 0.01 |
| Female | 16.6% (161) | 3.9% (15) | 1.3% (3) | |
| NA | 0.4% (4) | 0.2% (1) | 0.5% (1) | |
| Ethnicity | ||||
| White | 83.7% (811) | 91.5% (354) | 93.1% (215) | p < 0.01 |
| Black | 12.8% (124) | 5.7% (22) | 3% (7) | |
| Asian | 1.5% (15) | 1.3% (5) | 1.3% (3) | |
| Others/NA | 2.0% (19) | 1.6% (6) | 2.6% (6) | |
| Origin | ||||
| Paris areaa | 38.4% (372) | 37% (143) | 41.6% (96) | p = 0.66 |
| Other French regions | 55.3% (536) | 56.8% (220) | 52.8% (122) | |
| Overseas | 6.3% (61) | 6.2% (24) | 5.6% (13) | |
| Risk | ||||
| MSM | 65.6% (636) | 85.8% (332) | 88.3% (204) | p < 0.01 |
| HTS | 27.6% (267) | 7.5% (29) | 4.3% (10) | |
| IDU | 0.3% (3) | 0% (0) | 0% (0) | |
| Others/NA | 6.5% (63) | 6.7% (26) | 7.4% (17) | |
| Year of diagnosis | ||||
| 1999–2005 | 38.4% (372) | 24.8% (96) | 20.3% (47) | p < 0.01† |
| 2006–2010 | 34.2% (332) | 40.6% (157) | 43.7% (101) | |
| 2011–2014 | 27.4% (265) | 34.6% (134) | 35.9% (83) | |
| CD4 (cells/µL)—median (IQR) | 506 (382–655) | 522 (382–655) | 525 (379–659) | p = 0.25 |
| HIV-RNA level | 5.1 (4.4–5.8) | 5.2 (4.7–5.8) | 5.2 (4.6–5.8) | p = 0.15 |
| HIV-1 subtype | ||||
| B | 71.5% (693) | 74.9% (290) | 69.2% (160) | p = 0.01 |
| CRF02_AG | 13.4% (130) | 20.4% (79) | 28.1% (65) | |
| A | 3.2% (31) | 0.2% (2) | 0 | |
| C | 2.4% (23) | 0% (0) | 0 | |
| Others | 9.5% (92) | 3.8% (16) | 2.6% (6) | |
MSM man who have sex with men, HTS heterosexual individual, IDU injection drug user
§Statistical significance was assessed between clustering and non-clustering individuals
aZipcodes: 75, 91, 92,93, 94 and 95; † Chi square test for trend
Fig. 1Inferred HIV transmission clusters. HIV-1 transmission cluster diagrams illustrating the structure and demographics of the putative transmission clusters identified in the PRIMO ANRS CO6 cohort. A total of 387 of the 1356 (28.5%) individuals were connected with at least one other individual. Color indicates the reported transmission risk [red MSM; green heterosexual (HTS), purple others]; and shape denotes gender (ellipse male, square women). All edges represent a genetic distance of ≤1.5% separating nodes. All shapes are labeled according to the HIV-1 subtype. NA not available. White and unfilled dots correspond to missing informations
Fig. 2Characteristics of the 3 larger clusters B1, AG1 and AG2. a Transmission network of the three larger cluster AG1 (n = 14), AG2 (N = 41) and B1 (n = 9) and evolution of the main clusters over the study period. b Map representing the number of clustering individuals by location of residence. c Ancestral root state probabilities. The root state probabilities are presented with the color codes corresponding to the 11 equally populated regions
Fig. 3Bayesian time-scaled tree of the HIV transmission network of subtype B (a) and CRF02_AG (b) pol sequences in clusters from the participants enrolled in the PRIMO ANRS cohort between 1999 and 2014. Time scaled in year. Nodes and branches are colored according to the most probable location state of their descendent nodes. Tips are colored according to the recorded location of sampling