Literature DB >> 28843576

Effect of HSV-2 infection on subsequent HIV acquisition: an updated systematic review and meta-analysis.

Katharine J Looker1, Jocelyn A R Elmes2, Sami L Gottlieb3, Joshua T Schiffer4, Peter Vickerman5, Katherine M E Turner6, Marie-Claude Boily2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: HIV and herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) infections cause a substantial global disease burden and are epidemiologically correlated. Two previous systematic reviews of the association between HSV-2 and HIV found evidence that HSV-2 infection increases the risk of HIV acquisition, but these reviews are now more than a decade old.
METHODS: For this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched PubMed, MEDLINE, and Embase (from Jan 1, 2003, to May 25, 2017) to identify studies investigating the risk of HIV acquisition after exposure to HSV-2 infection, either at baseline (prevalent HSV-2 infection) or during follow-up (incident HSV-2 infection). Studies were included if they were a cohort study, controlled trial, or case-control study (including case-control studies nested within a cohort study or clinical trial); if they assessed the effect of pre-existing HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition; and if they determined the HSV-2 infection status of study participants with a type-specific assay. We calculated pooled random-effect estimates of the association between prevalent or incident HSV-2 infection and HIV seroconversion. We also extended previous investigations through detailed meta-regression and subgroup analyses. In particular, we investigated the effect of sex and risk group (general population vs higher-risk populations) on the relative risk (RR) of HIV acquisition after prevalent or incident HSV-2 infection. Higher-risk populations included female sex workers and their clients, men who have sex with men, serodiscordant couples, and attendees of sexually transmitted infection clinics.
FINDINGS: We identified 57 longitudinal studies exploring the association between HSV-2 and HIV. HIV acquisition was almost tripled in the presence of prevalent HSV-2 infection among general populations (adjusted RR 2·7, 95% CI 2·2-3·4; number of estimates [Ne]=22) and was roughly doubled among higher-risk populations (1·7, 1·4-2·1; Ne=25). Incident HSV-2 infection in general populations was associated with the highest risk of acquisition of HIV (4·7, 2·2-10·1; Ne=6). Adjustment for confounders at the study level was often incomplete but did not significantly affect the results. We found moderate heterogeneity across study estimates, which was explained by risk group, world region, and HSV-2 exposure type (prevalent vs incident).
INTERPRETATION: We found evidence that HSV-2 infection increases the risk of HIV acquisition. This finding has important implications for management of individuals diagnosed with HSV-2 infection, particularly for those who are newly infected. Interventions targeting HSV-2, such as new HSV vaccines, have the potential for additional benefit against HIV, which could be particularly powerful in regions with a high incidence of co-infection. FUNDING: World Health Organization. Copyright This is an Open Access article published under the CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO license which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. In any use of this article, there should be no suggestion that WHO endorses any specific organisation, products or services. The use of the WHO logo is not permitted. This notice should be preserved along with the article's original URL.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28843576      PMCID: PMC5700807          DOI: 10.1016/S1473-3099(17)30405-X

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet Infect Dis        ISSN: 1473-3099            Impact factor:   71.421


Introduction

HIV and herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) are two global health problems. In 2015, 36·7 million people were estimated to be living with HIV/AIDS globally. In 2012, an estimated 417 million people aged 15–49 years had HSV-2 infection. 70% of HIV infections are in sub-Saharan Africa, which also has the highest HSV-2 prevalence.1, 2 HSV-2 causes genital herpes, which, when symptomatic, is characterised by periodic recurrences of painful genital ulcers. Although genital herpes is asymptomatic or unrecognised in about 80–90% of individuals, asymptomatic viral reactivation and shedding are common. Thus, although individuals with HSV-2 are most infectious when they are symptomatic, most transmissions are thought to occur when the source partner is asymptomatic. Genital HSV-2 infection can considerably affect relationships through feelings of shame and stigma and concerns about risk of transmission.5, 6 HIV and HSV-2 are both lifelong sexually transmitted infections (STIs) that are associated with similar risk factors (eg, age, sex, partner change rate, condom use, male circumcision).7, 8, 9, 10 Additionally, evidence exists of direct and reciprocal biological interactions between HIV and HSV-2.11, 12 Active HSV-2 infection, regardless of symptoms, involves high concentrations of activated CD4-positive T cells, which are target cells for HIV, in the genital area and can lead to breaks in the mucosal layer through which HIV can enter. Because genital ulceration and viral shedding occur most frequently in the first year of HSV-2 infection,14, 15, 16 the increase in HIV susceptibility might be highest for incident HSV-2 infections. Co-infection with HIV increases HSV-2 genital shedding and transmissibility, while HSV-2 infection correlates with increased HIV viraemia and transmissibility.17, 18, 19, 20 Evidence before this study Herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) and HIV are both lifelong infections sharing common risk factors and widely co-occur geographically. Two meta-analytic systematic reviews of longitudinal studies have been published to date and have shown the adjusted risk of HIV acquisition among individuals with prevalent HSV-2 infection to be two to three times the risk in those without. This increased risk is thought to be caused by the recruitment of activated CD4-positive T cells to the genital area, which are target cells for HIV, and breaks in the protective epithelial layer during active HSV-2 infection. However, the most recent of these reviews is now more than a decade old and only included 19 studies, limiting the scope for assessing the effect of heterogeneity and study quality. The substantial number of new studies published on the subject since then allows for more in-depth investigation, including, for the first time, quantification of the effect of exposure to incident in addition to prevalent HSV-2 infection on pooled estimates of the association with HIV acquisition. For this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched PubMed, MEDLINE, and Embase between Jan 1, 2003, and May 25, 2017, for studies of the association between incident or prevalent HSV-2 infection and HIV infection. Studies were included if they were a cohort study, controlled trial, or case-control study (including case-control studies nested within a cohort or controlled trial); were designed to assess the effect of preceding HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition; and used a type-specific antibody assay to determine HSV-2 infection (serostatus). 57 longitudinal studies met our inclusion criteria, which was 38 more than the last systematic search and review (by Freeman and colleagues). Added value of this study We report that the pooled adjusted risk of HIV acquisition after incident HSV-2 infection is almost five times the risk without HSV-2 infection and almost twice the risk associated with exposure to prevalent HSV-2 infection. These findings provide a strong indication for a biological effect of HSV-2 infection on HIV, because the frequency and severity of genital ulceration, viral shedding, and associated inflammation in the genital tract are highest in new HSV-2 infections and tend to decrease with time after infection. The association was higher among general populations than among higher-risk populations. Study-level adjustment for confounders was often incomplete, but did not meaningfully affect the association when comparing crude and adjusted pooled estimates. Heterogeneity across study estimates was moderate. We extended previous reviews through detailed assessment of heterogeneity using meta-regression and sub-pooling and through extensive assessment of potential biases. We found limited evidence of publication bias. Implications of all the available evidence Our results provide evidence in support of a direct effect of HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition, which is strengthened by our finding of significantly higher HIV risk associated with incident HSV-2 infection than with prevalent HSV-2 infection. At the population level, new interventions targeting HSV-2, such as new vaccines or microbicides, could have an additional indirect benefit on HIV as a consequence of the interactions between HIV and HSV-2. Such synergies could greatly enhance the effect of combination prevention for HIV infection, particularly in settings with high HIV prevalence. The magnitude of this public health benefit now needs to be carefully estimated for different settings by use of mathematical models informed by the most recent evidence of the associations between HSV and HIV. Development of multipurpose prevention products that could protect against multiple STIs (eg, topical microbicides and oral pre-exposure prophylaxis) would provide exciting opportunities to simultaneously reduce the burden of disease of more than one infection.21, 22, 23 Quantifying the effect of HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition has important public health implications, particularly in high-prevalence settings where co-infection is common, because prevention of HSV-2 infection (with single-purpose or multipurpose prevention tools) might indirectly prevent HIV infection. Although trials of use of daily suppressive antiviral therapy against HSV-2 have not shown reduced risk of HIV acquisition or transmission,24, 25, 26 perhaps because agents were not used at sufficient doses or for sufficient duration, new vaccines against HSV-2 that are currently under development could hold more promise for HIV prevention. Two systematic reviews and meta-analyses of the association between HSV-2 infection and subsequent HIV acquisition have been done: one in 2002 and the other in 2006 (the one in 2006 was briefly updated in an editorial). These reviews reported a two to three times increase in the risk of HIV infection with baseline prevalent HSV-2 infection;11, 12 estimates of the association tended to be lower for high-risk populations than for low-risk populations. Here we update and substantially augment these reviews to modernise our understanding of the interaction between HSV-2 infection and HIV, in line with the pace of advancing prevention efforts against HSV-2 and HIV.

Methods

Search strategy and selection criteria

For this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched PubMed, MEDLINE, and Embase between Jan 1, 2003, and May 25, 2017, to identify studies of the relative risk (RR) of HIV acquisition after exposure to HSV-2 infection either at baseline (ie, prevalent infection) or during follow-up (ie, incident infection), published since the review by Freeman and colleagues. For PubMed, we searched for articles and abstracts using the terms (“HIV”, “human immunodeficiency virus”, “human immunedeficiency virus”, “human immune deficiency virus”, OR “human immuno deficiency virus”) AND (“HSV”, “herpes simplex”, “herpes virus type 2”, “herpes virus 2”, “herpesvirus 2”, “genital herpes” OR “herpes genitalis”). Articles in PubMed were also searched with the Medical Subject Headings terms (“herpes simplex” OR “simplexvirus”) AND (“human immunodeficiency virus”, “HIV infection”, “HIV antibodies”, “HIV seronegativity”, OR “HIV seroprevalence”). We included studies if they were a cohort study, controlled trial, or case-control study (including case-control studies nested within a cohort or controlled trial); were designed to assess the effect of preceding HSV-2 infection, compared with HSV-2 negativity, on HIV acquisition (ie, excluding case-control studies based on samples from only one point in time and studies that only looked at the effect of pre-existing HIV infection on HSV-2 acquisition); and determined the HSV-2 infection status of study participants with an antibody-type-specific assay. Individuals were defined as HSV-2 negative (unexposed) if they remained HSV-2 seronegative throughout follow-up (preferably) or were HSV-2 seronegative at baseline (for those studies in which HSV-2 testing was not done during follow-up; repeat testing that was done but not reported was noted as a possible source of reporting bias for the subsequent assessment of study quality). For full details of the search, selection criteria, and data extraction, see the appendix. For studies measuring incident HSV-2 infection, we classified RR estimates of HIV acquisition after exposure to incident HSV-2 infection into five subcategories for timing sequence. These subcategories reflected uncertainty in the exact timing of HSV-2 and HIV seroconversion: (1) HSV-2 seroconversion was observed in a previous time interval and thus HSV-2 infection happened before HIV (definitely before); (2) HSV-2 seroconversion was observed in the same time interval as HIV seroconversion and so HSV-2 infection might have happened before or after HIV infection (indeterminably close); (3) HSV-2 seroconversion was observed in a previous or in the same time interval as HIV seroconversion (before and indeterminably close); (4a) some HSV-2 seroconversion might have occurred after HIV infection (maybe after and indeterminably close or before); and (4b) some HSV-2 seroconversion was observed after HIV infection (after and indeterminably close or before; appendix). Two authors (KJL and JARE) did the systematic review and meta-analysis, according to PRISMA and MOOSE guidelines. Conflicts about inclusion were resolved through discussion between reviewers.

Data analysis

Based on previous evidence suggesting differential susceptibility to HIV and HSV-2 by sex,7, 8, 9 after exposure to incident HSV-2 infection,14, 15, 16 and by risk behaviour, we defined a priori that our primary outcomes would be pooled RR estimates of the association between incident HIV infection and pre-existing prevalent or incident HSV-2 infection, for both women and men and by risk group (general population vs higher-risk populations), also allowing for comparisons with previous pooled estimates. Higher-risk populations included female sex workers and their clients, men who have sex with men, serodiscordant couples, and attendees of STI clinics. No other stratification was used. To minimise biases due to reverse causation, pooled RR estimates for the association between HIV infection and exposure to incident HSV-2 infection were restricted to study estimates when HSV-2 seroconversion was definitely known to have occurred before HIV seroconversion. To assess study quality, we used the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale to define nine criteria assessing selection of study participants, sample representativeness, exposure or outcome ascertainment, and confounding for the extracted information about participant and study characteristics. A star was awarded for each predetermined criterion that was met (appendix). This assessment was done at the estimate level, not the study level. The effect of the number of stars awarded and other measures of study quality related to study characteristics on RR estimates was subsequently explored with meta-regression and subgroup analyses. We investigated the effect of heterogeneity across independent RR estimates using the I2 statistic. Sources of heterogeneity were explored with univariate meta-regression analysis of independent adjusted RR estimates, which estimated the fraction of the between-study variance in adjusted RR estimates (ie, R2) explained by participant characteristics (eg, world region), study characteristics (eg, study design), and study quality (eg, number of Newcastle-Ottawa Scale stars). Multivariate meta-regression analysis was also done with estimates for exposure to prevalent HSV-2 infection, but not with estimates for exposure to incident HSV-2 infection because of the small number of estimates (Ne). Additionally, we did separate subgroup analyses of adjusted RR estimates for the incident and prevalent HSV-2 exposures (appendix). Publication bias was assessed quantitatively at the estimate level, not the study level, in two ways. First, we produced funnel plots and did Egger's test for publication bias for both crude RR and adjusted RR estimates and for exposure to prevalent compared with exposure to incident HSV-2 infection (appendix). Second, we assessed with meta-regression analysis whether crude RR estimates calculated from the available data were less likely to be significant than those provided directly in the paper. Third, we qualitatively assessed whether there was evidence of selective reporting of significant results. All meta-analyses, meta-regressions, subgroup analyses, and forest plots were done with R version 3.2.2. We derived pooled RR estimates with natural log-transformed study estimates and SEs with random-effect models, based on the DerSimonian-Laird inverse-variance method, using the metafor package in R. Pooled estimates were then back-transformed to the original scale (further details in the appendix).

Role of the funding source

This study was funded by WHO through the Unified Budget, Results and Accountability Framework (UBRAF) from the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). SLG from WHO commissioned the study, contributed to the direction of the work, and commented on the drafts. KJL and JARE had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication.

Results

We identified 96 relevant publications from 57 independent studies in the systematic review (figure 1). 54 studies reported on the RR of HIV acquisition after exposure to prevalent HSV-2 infection and 28 studies reported on the RR of HIV acquisition after exposure to incident HSV-2 infection (table 1; appendix). More studies reported on men than on women and on female sex workers, men who have sex with men, and other higher-risk groups than on general populations (table 1). Most studies were done in Africa, in populations where baseline HSV-2 prevalence was greater than 30%, and were observational cohort studies with follow-up exceeding 1 year. Additionally, most studies tested for HIV every 6 months or more frequently and defined the unexposed group for exposure to prevalent HSV-2 infection as participants who were HSV-2 (sero)negative at baseline. Key potential confounders that were adjusted for included age and sexual behaviour, while several studies inappropriately adjusted for genital ulcer disease.
Figure 1

Study selection

*The search was done in parallel by two reviewers (KJL and JARE). The results for one reviewer are shown; the results were very similar between the two reviewers. Each reviewer found eight publications to be relevant that the other reviewer did not. HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2.

Table 1

Description of studies and RR estimates of the association between HIV incidence and exposure to HSV-2 infection by participant and study characteristics

Prevalent HSV-2 infection*
Incident HSV-2 infection
Number of studies (n=54)Number of estimates
Number of studies (n=28)Number of estimates
Crude RRAdjusted RRCrude RRAdjusted RR
Participant characteristics
Mean or median age§
≤25 years15181710912
>25 years396854203135
Not reported241110
Sex
All women284134111424
General population11171541013
Female sex workers8913217
Other higher-risk populations10156534
All men283731172319
General population10141861113
Men who have sex with men131699113
Other higher-risk populations||574313
Women and men combined**8127544
WHO region
Africa356456162738
Americas8115573
Europe110110
Eastern Mediterranean000000
Southeast Asia577446
Western Pacific442220
World (not including Africa)132000
HSV-2 prevalence
≤30%131412886
>30%427559213341
Not reported111000
Study characteristics
Study year (mid-point)
Pre-2000163132112020
2000 onwards335434161925
Not reported656222
Study design
Cohort273438151421
Case-control††784672
Controlled trial20483072024
Study design for analysis of controlled trial data
Prospective17331861012
Nested case-control††3151221012
Controlled trial intervention group
Intervention682122
Control683122
Combined20322571620
Overall number of participants for study
≤1000314936132315
>1000244136161832
Follow-up duration
≤1 year1422157119
>1 year376452182637
Not reported445441
Length of time between tests for HIV
≤6 months365541172227
>6 months6171641212
Mixture of short and long intervals344235
Not reported91411543
HSV-2 assay cutoff (only studies with Focus HerpeSelect as known assay)
1·1/manufacturer's recommendation/unknown1422158913
>1·191114449
Definition of prevalent HSV-2 infection exposure
Baseline477960NANANA
Baseline and >60 days before HIV seroconversion127NANANA
Baseline or >2 years before HIV seroconversion111NANANA
Before, or at same visit as, HIV seroconversion352NANANA
Same interval as HIV seroconversion110NANANA
At visit 6 months before HIV seroconversion111NANANA
Anytime111NANANA
Definition of incident HSV-2 infection exposure
≤60 days before HIV seroconversionNANANA101
60 days before HIV seroconversionNANANA105
≤6 months before HIV seroconversionNANANA221
>6 months before HIV seroconversionNANANA111
≤2 years before HIV seroconversionNANANA111
Before, or at same visit as, HIV seroconversionNANANA221
Visit before HIV seroconversionNANANA111
Same interval as HIV seroconversionNANANA110
AnytimeNANANA213334
Not reportedNANANA102
Definition of unexposed group
HSV-2 negative at baseline284024000
HSV-2 negative throughout follow-up213940283844
Not reported6118133
Extraction of crude estimate‡‡
Reported3245NA1420NA
Calculated from available data2345NA1121NA
Adjusted for male circumcision status (men or women and men combined)§§¶¶
Yes9NA145NA6
No15NA219NA17
Unknown3NA30NA0
Adjusted for condom use§§¶¶
Yes15NA258NA18
No23NA4312NA27
Unknown4NA41NA2
Adjusted for female hormonal contraceptive use (women or women and men combined)§§¶¶
Yes6NA134NA10
No16NA268NA16
Unknown2NA21NA2
Adjusted for any sexual behaviour (excluding condom use)§§¶¶
Yes29NA4816NA33
No8NA213NA12
Unknown3NA31NA2
Adjusted for genital ulcer disease§§¶¶
Yes9NA188NA16
No29NA5111NA30
Unknown3NA31NA1
Adjusted for number of sexual partners¶¶
Yes20NA3311NA24
No16NA328NA18
Unknown5NA73NA5
Adjusted for age¶¶
Yes34NA6314NA41
No8NA95NA5
Unknown0NA01NA1
Timing of incident HSV-2 infection relative to HIV acquisition||||
1 (definitely before)NANANA7814
2 (indeterminably close)NANANA220
3 (before and indeterminably close)NANANA121211
4a (maybe after and indeterminably close or before)NANANA81417
4b (after and indeterminably close or before)NANANA555
Type of estimate
Hazard ratio293143151325
Incidence ratio172211889
Odds ratio213718112013

HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. RR=relative risk. NA=not applicable. STI=sexually transmitted infection.

The crude number of estimates for all studies was 90 and the adjusted number of estimates for all studies was 72.

The crude number of estimates for all studies was 41 and the adjusted number of estimates for all studies was 47.

Same study included in more than one subcategory.

Values might be estimated from ranges.

Women with higher-risk sexual behaviour, women working in food and recreational facilities, STI clinic attendees, bar workers, and women in an HIV serodiscordant partnership (grouped with female sex workers in figures).

Men with higher-risk sexual behaviour (likely to be men who have sex with men), STI clinic attendees, male trucking company employees, clients of female sex workers, Thai military conscripts (grouped with men who have sex with men in figures).

Estimates by sex could not be obtained.

All case-control studies were subsequently analysed together.

Only studies providing crude estimates or sufficient information to calculate a crude estimate.

Includes probable adjustment, and variable not included in multivariate model because of non-significance.

Only studies providing adjusted estimates.

Five subcategories for the timing sequence of HSV-2 and HIV seroconversion are defined in Methods.

Study selection *The search was done in parallel by two reviewers (KJL and JARE). The results for one reviewer are shown; the results were very similar between the two reviewers. Each reviewer found eight publications to be relevant that the other reviewer did not. HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. Description of studies and RR estimates of the association between HIV incidence and exposure to HSV-2 infection by participant and study characteristics HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. RR=relative risk. NA=not applicable. STI=sexually transmitted infection. The crude number of estimates for all studies was 90 and the adjusted number of estimates for all studies was 72. The crude number of estimates for all studies was 41 and the adjusted number of estimates for all studies was 47. Same study included in more than one subcategory. Values might be estimated from ranges. Women with higher-risk sexual behaviour, women working in food and recreational facilities, STI clinic attendees, bar workers, and women in an HIV serodiscordant partnership (grouped with female sex workers in figures). Men with higher-risk sexual behaviour (likely to be men who have sex with men), STI clinic attendees, male trucking company employees, clients of female sex workers, Thai military conscripts (grouped with men who have sex with men in figures). Estimates by sex could not be obtained. All case-control studies were subsequently analysed together. Only studies providing crude estimates or sufficient information to calculate a crude estimate. Includes probable adjustment, and variable not included in multivariate model because of non-significance. Only studies providing adjusted estimates. Five subcategories for the timing sequence of HSV-2 and HIV seroconversion are defined in Methods. 39 studies reported 55 adjusted RR estimates for our primary outcome: HIV acquisition after exposure to prevalent or incident HSV-2 infection (timing of HSV-2 infection definitely before HIV infection) among general and higher-risk populations, by sex (figure 2). No significant differences were seen in the associations among general populations by sex. The overall pooled adjusted RR for general populations was 2·7 (95% CI 2·2–3·4; Ne=22; I2=59%) for exposure to prevalent HSV-2 infection and 4·7 (2·2–10·1; Ne=6; I2=64%) for exposure to incident HSV-2 infection. The results for higher-risk populations were similar to those for general populations, but the magnitude of the associations was lower: the overall pooled adjusted RR estimate for higher-risk populations was 1·7 (1·4–2·1; Ne=25; I2=45%) for exposure to prevalent HSV-2 infection and 2·9 (1·7–5·0; Ne=2; I2=0%) for exposure to incident HSV-2 infection.
Figure 2

Pooled adjusted RR estimates of the association between HIV incidence and exposure to HSV-2 infection

Estimates for effect of both prevalent and incident HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition (timing 1; ie, HSV-2 seroconversion was observed in a previous time interval and so definitely occurred before HIV seroconversion) are shown. Estimates are shown for women and men combined when they could not be obtained separately by sex. Multiple estimates for the same study corresponding to different study countries or areas are shown when these could not be combined or when it was not appropriate to do so (ie, countries spanning two sub-regions); however, all estimates are independent (ie, for non-overlapping study populations) within each HSV-2 exposure subcategory. Ne=number of estimates. RR=relative risk. HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. *Data from these studies were obtained from reference 11.

Pooled adjusted RR estimates of the association between HIV incidence and exposure to HSV-2 infection Estimates for effect of both prevalent and incident HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition (timing 1; ie, HSV-2 seroconversion was observed in a previous time interval and so definitely occurred before HIV seroconversion) are shown. Estimates are shown for women and men combined when they could not be obtained separately by sex. Multiple estimates for the same study corresponding to different study countries or areas are shown when these could not be combined or when it was not appropriate to do so (ie, countries spanning two sub-regions); however, all estimates are independent (ie, for non-overlapping study populations) within each HSV-2 exposure subcategory. Ne=number of estimates. RR=relative risk. HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. *Data from these studies were obtained from reference 11. 50 studies reported on 64 crude RR estimates for our primary outcome (appendix). Pooled crude RR estimates overall and by sex were similar to pooled adjusted RR estimates, although the pooled crude RR estimates for exposure to incident HSV-2 infection were somewhat higher than the adjusted RR estimates for general populations and were lower than the adjusted RR estimates for higher-risk populations. Crude estimates were generally more heterogeneous than adjusted estimates (figure 2; appendix). In the univariate meta-regression analysis of 48 independent adjusted estimates (Ne=40 for prevalent HSV-2 infection; Ne=8 for incident HSV-2 infection), only risk group (higher-risk population vs general population; R2=31%), world region (Africa vs outside Africa; R2=24%), definition of HSV-2 unexposed group (HSV-2 negative at baseline vs HSV-2 negative throughout follow-up; R2=24%), and HSV-2 exposure type (prevalent vs incident; R2=17%) significantly explained the variation across study estimates (all p<0·05; table 2). The risk of HIV acquisition was about twice as large for general populations compared with higher-risk populations (RR 0·53, 95% CI 0·38–0·75), for Africa compared with outside Africa (0·57, 0·39–0·82), for incident HSV-2 infection compared with prevalent HSV-2 infection (1·96, 1·16–3·31), and when the definition for the unexposed group was not reported compared with when the definition for the unexposed group was HSV-2 negative throughout follow-up (1·84, 1·08–3·14). Variation across study estimates was not explained by confounder adjustment or any of the other factors explored, including star rating based on the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. In a multivariate meta-regression analysis restricted to estimates for prevalent HSV-2 infection, risk group, world region, and definition of the HSV-2 unexposed group were all significant modifiers of the association with HIV infection (results not shown). However, we could not disentangle the effect of world region from that of risk group because no estimates for general populations were from outside Africa.
Table 2

Results of univariate meta-regression analysis of adjusted RR estimates

Number of estimatesAdjusted RR (95% CI)Variance explained R2 (%)p value
Participant characteristics
Mean or median age
≤25 years141·000%0·40
>25 years331·34 (0·88–2·04)····
Not reported11·26 (0·32–4·88)····
Sex
Women231·000%0·97
Men221·02 (0·68–1·53)····
Combined*30·90 (0·36–2·25)····
Risk group
General population221·0031%0·0004
Higher-risk population260·53 (0·38–0·75)····
World region (derived from WHO region)
African region341·0024%0·003
Outside Africa140·57 (0·39–0·82)····
HSV-2 prevalence
≤30%101·006%0·08
>30%370·97 (0·63–1·51)····
Not reported10·24 (0·07–0·85)····
Study characteristics
Study year (mid-point)
Pre-2000181·000%0·85
2000 onwards241·13 (0·74–1·71)····
Not reported61·05 (0·51–2·14)····
Study design
Cohort251·000%0·69
Controlled trial151·20 (0·77–1·86)····
Case-control (including nested case-control)80·98 (0·56–1·71)····
Controlled trial intervention group
Control0······
Intervention0······
Combined19NA····
Follow-up duration
≤1 year121·000%0·97
>1 year320·95 (0·59–1·52)····
Not reported40·94 (0·39–2·25)····
Length of time between tests for HIV
≤6 months311·000%0·98
>6 months60·99 (0·55–1·78)····
Mixture of short and long intervals30·86 (0·37–2·04)····
Not reported81·07 (0·62–1·84)····
HSV-2 assay cutoff (only those studies with Focus HerpeSelect as known assay)
1·1/manufacturer's recommendation/unknown121·0019%0·20
>1·171·57 (0·79–3·10)····
HSV-2 exposure type
Prevalent401·0017%0·01
Incident81·96 (1·16–3·31)····
Definition of unexposed group
HSV-2 negative throughout follow-up211·0024%0·005
HSV-2 negative at baseline190·76 (0·52–1·11)····
Not reported81·84 (1·08–3·14)····
Adjusted for male circumcision status (men or women and men combined)
No151·000%0·48
Yes71·33 (0·84–2·10)····
Not reported31·08 (0·57–2·05)····
Adjusted for condom use
No271·000%0·88
Yes171·10 (0·72–1·68)····
Not reported41·13 (0·52–2·48)····
Adjusted for female hormonal contraceptive use (women or women and men combined)
No171·000%0·70
Yes71·25 (0·58–2·69)····
Not reported21·82 (0·34–9·81)····
Adjusted for any sexual behaviour (excluding condom use)
No91·000%0·48
Yes361·39 (0·81–2·37)····
Not reported31·46 (0·58–3·69)····
Adjusted for genital ulcer disease
No361·0010%0·14
Yes91·54 (0·97–2·45)····
Not reported31·61 (0·60–4.34)····
Adjusted for number of sexual partners
No191·000%0·46
Yes230·85 (0·55–1·31)····
Not reported60·68 (0·36–1·26)····
Adjusted for age
No61·000%0·99
Yes421·00 (0·54–1·85)····
Estimate type
Hazard ratio or incidence ratio391·000%0·25
Odds ratio90·74 (0·45–1·23)····
Study quality (as defined by number of stars awarded with Newcastle-Ottawa scale)
Increase of 1 star (continuous variable)481·00 (0·85–1·17)0%0·96

Only independent adjusted RR estimates were included. RR=relative risk. HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. NA=not applicable.

Estimates by sex could not be obtained.

Results of univariate meta-regression analysis of adjusted RR estimates Only independent adjusted RR estimates were included. RR=relative risk. HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. NA=not applicable. Estimates by sex could not be obtained. Figure 3 shows the pooled adjusted RR estimates from our subgroup analysis for exposure to prevalent or incident HSV-2 infection by key risk factors. Prevalent HSV-2 infection was associated with a significantly (95% CI did not overlap) higher risk of HIV acquisition in general populations (adjusted RR 2·7, 95% CI 2·2–3·4; Ne=22; I2=59%) than in higher-risk populations (1·7, 1·4–2·1; Ne=25; I2=45%; same as shown in figure 2) and in Africa (2·5, 2·1–3·0; Ne=34; I2=52%) than outside Africa (1·5, 1·2–2·0; Ne=13; I2=56%), but not for any other characteristic explored.
Figure 3

Sub-pooled adjusted RR estimates of the association between HIV incidence and exposure to HSV-2 infection

Estimates for effect of both prevalent and incident HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition (timing 1; ie, HSV-2 seroconversion was observed in a previous time interval and so definitely occurred before HIV seroconversion) are shown. Estimates were added for sub-pooling if they were available by subcategories, although only independent study estimates were included within a subcategory. RR=relative risk. HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. Ne=number of estimates. FSWs=female sex workers. MSM=men who have sex with men.

Sub-pooled adjusted RR estimates of the association between HIV incidence and exposure to HSV-2 infection Estimates for effect of both prevalent and incident HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition (timing 1; ie, HSV-2 seroconversion was observed in a previous time interval and so definitely occurred before HIV seroconversion) are shown. Estimates were added for sub-pooling if they were available by subcategories, although only independent study estimates were included within a subcategory. RR=relative risk. HSV-2=herpes simplex virus type 2. Ne=number of estimates. FSWs=female sex workers. MSM=men who have sex with men. For exposure to incident HSV-2 infection, the risk of HIV acquisition was significantly higher in younger (≤25 years; adjusted RR 7·6, 95% CI 4·4–13·3; Ne=3; I2=0%; figure 3) than in older (>25 years; 2·5, 1·6–3·9; Ne=4; I2=3%) individuals; however, no study estimates were available for younger individuals in higher-risk populations, whereas two of four estimates for older individuals were from higher-risk populations. The risk of HIV acquisition after exposure to incident HSV-2 infection was also significantly higher when HIV testing was done every 6 months or less (5·0, 3·1–8·1; Ne=7; I2=38%) than when tests were done at a mixture of short and long intervals (1·1, 0·4–3·1; Ne=1; I2=0%), although this analysis was based on only one study. No other significant differences were observed, although the magnitude of the association tended to be larger for women than for men. Notably, most study estimates came from women in general populations in Africa. Our subgroup analysis showed that pooled adjusted RR estimates were increased, although not significantly, when exposure to incident HSV-2 infection was known to have or might have occurred after HIV (timing 4a and 4b vs timing 1; figure 3). The study characteristics relevant to the evaluation of study quality, and the results of the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale assessment, are summarised in the appendix. Of the 55 adjusted estimates included in our principal meta-analysis, a seven-star or eight-star rating was the most common (Ne=31). The most common reasons for loss of a star were defining the HSV-2 unexposed group by use of baseline status and no matching or adjustment for number of sexual partners. However, a star could also be lost if the required information for assessment was not reported in the paper, which is not necessarily the same as poor study quality. Conversely, a star could have been awarded for adequate participant retention (low loss to follow-up), which was assessed on the basis of the information in the publication but which might not have mentioned all dropouts. There was little indication of publication bias from the funnel plots (appendix): most study estimates were evenly distributed around the overall pooled crude and adjusted RR estimates. However, the fewer RR estimates available for exposure to incident HSV-2 infection than for exposure to prevalent HSV-2 infection made the assessment for incident HSV-2 infection more difficult. In a meta-regression analysis, crude RR estimates calculated from the available data were lower than those reported in the studies (0·79, 95% CI 0·57–1·09; R2=2·5%; p=0·15), although the difference was not significant. Our qualitative assessment found some evidence of selective reporting of estimates based on significance (eg, studies reporting crude but not adjusted estimates or only mentioning the significance of an association without presenting any estimates; appendix).

Discussion

This systematic review and meta-analysis provided new insight into the effect of HSV-2 infection on risk of HIV acquisition by analysis of 57 longitudinal studies of different study designs. We found good evidence that HIV incidence in general populations is roughly tripled by exposure to prevalent HSV-2 infection (adjusted RR 2·7, 95% CI 2·2–3·4), with an even larger increase in HIV risk after exposure to incident HSV-2 infection (4·7, 2·2–10·1). The greater cofactor effect for incident HSV-2 infection than for prevalent HSV-2 infection might be because newly acquired HSV-2 infection is associated with an increased frequency and severity of genital ulceration, viral shedding, and inflammation in the genital tract, symptoms and manifestations that decrease with time after infection.14, 15, 16 These biological mechanisms and gradient in risk strengthen the argument for a genuine biological effect of HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition risk. In addition to differences by prevalent versus incident HSV-2 infection, heterogeneity in the magnitude of the association across adjusted RR estimates was also explained by population risk group. The associations remained significant but were somewhat lower among higher-risk populations than among general populations, perhaps because these populations have an increased risk of HIV independent of HSV-2 or because higher-risk individuals infected with HSV-2 might be more likely to use condoms or abstain from sex when symptomatic. The results of our systematic review and meta-analysis were generally in line with, and strengthen results from, previous meta-analyses.11, 12 The 38 studies published since the last systematic search and review, and the large body of study information extracted, allowed us to comprehensively review existing evidence on the association between HSV-2 and HIV infections and assess the effects of a wide range of factors related to participant and study characteristics, including study quality, which have not been previously explored. We also produced the first pooled estimates of the association between exposure to incident HSV-2 infection and subsequent HIV acquisition. HSV-2 and HIV are lifelong infections that affect genital sites and have similar risk factors, such as sexual behaviour, which increases the risk of spurious association in observational studies because of confounding. We minimised the risk of confounding at the study level by focusing our analysis on adjusted estimates. However, the risk of residual confounding could not be totally eliminated because many potential confounding factors were often not controlled for, even in adjusted estimates. The presence of HSV-2 infection (particularly incident HSV-2 infection) might be a marker of having had sex with a partner infected with HIV because of the higher prevalence of HSV-2 among HIV-infected than among non-HIV-infected individuals.76, 77, 78 Except for serodiscordant-couple studies, in which partner HIV status was known, few studies controlled for partner characteristics. Additionally, some studies inappropriately adjusted for genital ulcer disease, which might have biased pooled estimates toward the null value because HSV-2 commonly causes genital ulcers and these act as a point of entry for HIV. Nevertheless, we did not find any notable difference between crude and adjusted pooled estimates, and, in the meta-regression analysis, we found that adjustment for key confounders was not associated with the effect size. Confounding could also have arisen from combining estimates from heterogeneous studies, which is an important reason for doing detailed meta-regression and subgroup analyses. Fewer estimates for incident HSV-2 than for prevalent HSV-2 increased the risk of confounding when combining heterogeneous studies, but also precluded a multivariate meta-regression analysis for incident HSV-2 infection. No estimates were available for general populations outside Africa for either prevalent or incident HSV-2 infection, meaning that our results might not be generalisable to general populations outside this setting. Furthermore, our finding of a higher risk of HIV with HSV-2 among general populations than among higher-risk populations could have been confounded by world region (or vice versa). Another potential threat to validity was misclassification bias of the exposure to HSV-2 infection. Misclassification bias can occur if HSV-2 exposure is defined solely according to HSV-2 antibody status at baseline and some unexposed individuals seroconvert to HSV-2 during the study. Although exposure status was defined solely on baseline HSV-2 infection status in half of the studies estimating the association between prevalent HSV-2 infection and HIV acquisition, we found only weak indication that the association between HSV-2 and HIV was lower in those studies. However, in our meta-regression analyses, estimates were significantly increased for unknown definition of the unexposed comparison group, which might be a proxy for poor study quality more generally. To minimise the risk of reverse causation, we only included longitudinal studies and categorised estimates for effect of incident HSV-2 infection on HIV acquisition according to the timing of HSV-2 infection compared with HIV seroconversion. For our principal meta-analysis and meta-regression, we restricted inclusion of estimates for incident HSV-2 infection to when incident HSV-2 infection was known with greatest certainty to have occurred before HIV seroconversion (ie, timing 1), excluding any estimates for which HSV-2 infection was known to or might have occurred after HIV infection. By erring on the side of caution, we might have inadvertently excluded estimates for when HSV-2 infection occurred before HIV in studies where testing was not done sufficiently frequently to disentangle the sequence of infection. However, those estimates that included known or possible HIV infection before HSV-2 acquisition were not significantly different to our estimate for timing 1. Our qualitative assessment of selective reporting of crude and adjusted estimates based on significance found some evidence of publication bias. However, publication bias was not significant from either funnel plots or our meta-regression comparing reported crude estimates with crude estimates derived from available data. We did not find any evidence in our meta-regression that study quality influenced the association between HSV-2 and HIV, except where the definition of HSV-2 negative was not reported, which was associated with a significantly increased risk of HIV acquisition due to HSV-2. Understanding the effect of HSV-2 infection on HIV risk is essential for several reasons. From a clinical perspective, knowledge of this association informs the advice and information given to individuals diagnosed with genital herpes, who might be at increased risk of acquiring HIV. Much, if not most, of HSV-associated HIV transmission is thought to occur outside symptomatic episodes, including among individuals who harbour HSV-2 infection but have never had symptoms of genital herpes. Thus, from a population perspective, understanding the interaction between HSV-2 and HIV is also important for informing public health interventions for the control of both infections, because an intervention targeting HSV-2 might have additional, indirect benefits on HIV. Current prevention and treatment options for HSV-2 infection are imperfect and limited by the often asymptomatic presentation of HSV-2 infection. However, development of new interventions is underway. Multipurpose prevention technologies (eg, microbicides) that target both HIV and HSV-2 infection hold promise, but developments have been hampered by low compliance and acceptability among women. The best option is likely to be an effective vaccine against HSV-2 infection. Efforts to develop an HSV-2 vaccine are underway. HSV-2 infection is a common infection globally, but has a particularly high incidence in specific settings where HIV is endemic, such as sub-Saharan Africa, and among higher-risk groups, who are important in concentrated HIV epidemics. Therefore, addressing the interactions between HSV-2 and HIV could produce substantial health and economic gains. This meta-analysis is an important step towards clearer quantification of the potential magnitude of that benefit.
  72 in total

1.  Quantifying heterogeneity in a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Julian P T Higgins; Simon G Thompson
Journal:  Stat Med       Date:  2002-06-15       Impact factor: 2.373

Review 2.  Increased prevalence of sexually transmitted viral infections in women: the role of female sex hormones in regulating susceptibility and immune responses.

Authors:  Charu Kaushic; Kristy L Roth; Varun Anipindi; Fangming Xiu
Journal:  J Reprod Immunol       Date:  2011-02-05       Impact factor: 4.054

3.  Changes in the contribution of genital tract infections to HIV acquisition among Kenyan high-risk women from 1993 to 2012.

Authors:  Linnet Masese; Jared M Baeten; Barbra A Richardson; Elizabeth Bukusi; Grace John-Stewart; Susan M Graham; Juma Shafi; James Kiarie; Julie Overbaugh; R Scott McClelland
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2015-06-01       Impact factor: 4.177

4.  The association of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2), Haemophilus ducreyi, and syphilis with HIV infection in young men in northern Thailand.

Authors:  K E Nelson; S Eiumtrakul; D Celentano; I Maclean; A Ronald; S Suprasert; D R Hoover; S Kuntolbutra; J M Zenilman
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Hum Retrovirol       Date:  1997-12-01

5.  Syndromic management of sexually-transmitted infections and behaviour change interventions on transmission of HIV-1 in rural Uganda: a community randomised trial.

Authors:  A Kamali; M Quigley; J Nakiyingi; J Kinsman; J Kengeya-Kayondo; R Gopal; A Ojwiya; P Hughes; L M Carpenter; J Whitworth
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2003-02-22       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Prevalence and incidence of herpes simplex virus type 2 infection among male Zimbabwean factory workers.

Authors:  W McFarland; L Gwanzura; M T Bassett; R Machekano; A S Latif; C Ley; J Parsonnet; R L Burke; D Katzenstein
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  1999-11       Impact factor: 5.226

7.  HIV-1 subtype E incidence and sexually transmitted diseases in a cohort of military conscripts in northern Thailand.

Authors:  T Nopkesorn; P A Mock; T D Mastro; S Sangkharomya; M Sweat; K Limpakarnjanarat; J Laosakkitiboran; N L Young; S A Morse; S Schmid; B G Weniger
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Hum Retrovirol       Date:  1998-08-01

8.  Decline in sexually transmitted infection prevalence and HIV incidence in female barworkers attending prevention and care services in Mbeya Region, Tanzania.

Authors:  Gabriele Riedner; Oliver Hoffmann; Mary Rusizoka; Donan Mmbando; Leonard Maboko; Heiner Grosskurth; Jim Todd; Richard Hayes; Michael Hoelscher
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2006-02-28       Impact factor: 4.177

9.  The epidemiology of HIV and HSV-2 infections among women participating in microbicide and vaccine feasibility studies in Northern Tanzania.

Authors:  Saidi H Kapiga; Fiona M Ewings; Tony Ao; Joseph Chilongani; Aika Mongi; Kathy Baisley; Suzanna Francis; Aura Andreasen; Ramadhan Hashim; Deborah Watson-Jones; John Changalucha; Richard Hayes
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-07-18       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Antiretroviral therapy reduces HIV transmission in discordant couples in rural Yunnan, China.

Authors:  Na He; Song Duan; Yingying Ding; Keming Rou; Jennifer M McGoogan; Manhong Jia; Yuecheng Yang; Jibao Wang; Julio S G Montaner; Zunyou Wu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-11-13       Impact factor: 3.240

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  85 in total

Review 1.  Biologic interactions between HSV-2 and HIV-1 and possible implications for HSV vaccine development.

Authors:  Joshua T Schiffer; Sami L Gottlieb
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2017-09-25       Impact factor: 3.641

2.  Prospective cohort study showing persistent HSV-2 shedding in women with genital herpes 2 years after acquisition.

Authors:  Meena Ramchandani; Stacy Selke; Amalia Magaret; Gail Barnum; Meei-Li Wu Huang; Lawrence Corey; Anna Wald
Journal:  Sex Transm Infect       Date:  2017-11-25       Impact factor: 3.519

3.  Age-disparate partnerships and HSV-2 among adolescent girls and young women in South Africa: implications for HIV infection risk.

Authors:  Brendan Maughan-Brown; Gavin George; Sean Beckett; Meredith Evans; Lara Lewis; Cherie Cawood; David Khanyile; Ayesha B M Kharsany
Journal:  Sex Transm Infect       Date:  2019-02-08       Impact factor: 3.519

Review 4.  Indole - a promising pharmacophore in recent antiviral drug discovery.

Authors:  Atukuri Dorababu
Journal:  RSC Med Chem       Date:  2020-11-06

5.  Seroprevalence of herpes simplex virus types 1 and 2 in Nigeria: a systematic review and meta-analyses.

Authors:  Eleazar E Reward; Sophia O Muo; Ibuchukwu N A Orabueze; Anthony C Ike
Journal:  Pathog Glob Health       Date:  2019-10-24       Impact factor: 2.894

Review 6.  [Anal herpes simplex virus infections].

Authors:  Albert Rübben
Journal:  Hautarzt       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 0.751

7.  Population prevalence of sexually transmitted infections in a high HIV burden district in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: Implications for HIV epidemic control.

Authors:  Ayesha B M Kharsany; Lyle R McKinnon; Lara Lewis; Cherie Cawood; David Khanyile; Domiciled Venessa Maseko; Tawni C Goodman; Sean Beckett; Kaymarlin Govender; Gavin George; Kassahun Abere Ayalew; Carlos Toledo
Journal:  Int J Infect Dis       Date:  2020-06-17       Impact factor: 3.623

8.  Pre-exposure prophylaxis differentially alters circulating and mucosal immune cell activation in herpes simplex virus type 2 seropositive women.

Authors:  Laura E Richert-Spuhler; Laura Pattacini; Margot Plews; Elizabeth Irungu; Timothy R Muwonge; Elly Katabira; Nelly Mugo; Adrienne F A Meyers; Connie Celum; Jared M Baeten; Jairam R Lingappa; Jennifer M Lund
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2019-11-15       Impact factor: 4.177

9.  A Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV)-2 Single-Cycle Candidate Vaccine Deleted in Glycoprotein D Protects Male Mice From Lethal Skin Challenge With Clinical Isolates of HSV-1 and HSV-2.

Authors:  Clare Burn; Natalie Ramsey; Scott J Garforth; Steven Almo; William R Jacobs; Betsy C Herold
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 5.226

10.  The Effect of Hormonal Contraception and Menstrual Cycle Timing on Genital Herpes Simplex Virus-2 Shedding and Lesions.

Authors:  Elizabeth Micks; Hyunju Son; Amalia Magaret; Stacy Selke; Christine Johnston; Anna Wald
Journal:  Sex Transm Dis       Date:  2019-01       Impact factor: 2.830

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