| Literature DB >> 30869002 |
A L Sharma1, T R Singh1, L S Singh1.
Abstract
Manipur, an international border region has the highest incidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 infection in India. Nevertheless, there have been no analytical reviews of research article published within this region. In this review, the authors aim to draw the attention of policy makers, medical practitioners and researchers in adopting new strategies to limit the expansion of HIV/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) not only in Manipur but also in other international border areas. A systematic search for published literature in last decade was performed based on the keywords 'Manipur' and 'HIV' using the PubMed. Twenty-six articles were selected and reviewed. There were high incidence of drug resistance (53%), emergence of recombinant virus (32%) and increased incidence of co-infection with hepatitis C virus. The prime cause of the HIV is due to the uses of 'heroin' smuggled from the 'South Asia Golden Triangle' and complex patterns of cross-border movement for trade and commerce. The drug abuse, social stigma, geographical location and resource limitation and socio-political problem of the region have contributed strongly on spreading and failure of preventively programme of HIV/AIDS. This review will provide vital knowledge for the policy makers and clinicians for sentinel surveillance of AIDS pandemic in Manipur and other international border regions.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; HIV disease (AIDS); HIV/AIDS; virology; virology (human) and epidemiology
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30869002 PMCID: PMC6518467 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268818003564
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.A flow chart showing the process of articles selection for this review.
Molecular epidemiology of HIV/AIDS in Manipur, North-east India: articles published since a decade and identified within the review
| Sl.no | Analysis | Results | Year of study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Multiregion hybridisation assay (30 samples) | 15 Subtype C, 1 subtype B, 14 with dual and multi-genomic recombination pattern | 2009 | Sarkar |
| 2 | Sequencing of | Prevalence of subtype C with few BC recombinants for the tat gene | 2010 | Mullick |
| 3 | PCR and restriction digestion (306 samples) | Manipur population do not have any additional protection against HIV infection | 2010 | Sarkar |
| 4 | Sequencing (1 sample) | Mosaic structure of subtype C back bone with Subtype B | 2012 | Sarkar |
| 5 | Sequencing (1 sample) | Subtype C backbone with India, while the subtype B insertions resemblance with Thailand. | 2012 | Sarkar |
| 6 | Sequencing (130 samples) | 65.45% subtype C, 32.73% URFs and 1.82% subtype B | 2016 | Sharma |
Fig. 2.Pictorial representation of factors which influence high HIV/AIDS.
Fact files of HIV/AIDS in Manipur
| Manipur | ||
|---|---|---|
| Details | Data | Sources |
| State population (Census 2011) | 2 855 794 | Census 2011, Manipur |
| Virology | HIV-1 and HIV-2 | MACS and Sharma |
| HIV-1 subtype (in 2016) | 66% Subtype C | Sharma |
| Prevalence of DRMs % (year) | 53% | Sharma |
| First case reported | February 1990 | MACS |
| Highest prevalence % (year) | 16.72% (1996) | MACS |
| Risk groups | IDU, heterosexual | MACS |
| Control program (year established) | 3 October 1996 (first in country) | MACS |
| Adult (15–49) prevalence (%) | 1.15 (0.88–1.55) | NACO HIV estimates 2015 |
| People living with HIV/AIDS | 24 457 (18 748–33 362) | NACO HIV estimates 2015 |
| Annual new infection | 429 | NACO HIV estimates 2015 |
| AIDS related death | 1146 | NACO HIV estimates 2015 |
| Need for ART | 15 510 | NACO HIV estimates 2015 |