Joint HIV and hepatitis C virus phylogenetic analyses signal network overlap among women engaged in sex work and men who purchase sex.

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q4 IMMUNOLOGY
Stephanie Melnychuk, Olga Balakireva, Daria Pavlova, Anna Lopatenko, Leigh M McClarty, Lisa Lazarus, Nicole Herpai, Michael Pickles, Sharmistha Mishra, Marissa L Becker, Paul Sandstrom, François Cholette
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Abstract

Background: Transmission of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) are heavily influenced by complex interactions within sexual or injecting networks where risk behaviors occur. In Ukraine, women engaged in sex work (WSW) and men who purchase sex (MWPS) are disproportionately affected by both viruses. The aim of our study was to the investigate the influence of underlying networks on transmission of HIV and HCV.

Methods: A cross-sectional integrated bio-behavioural survey was implemented among 560 WSW and 370 MWPS representative of sex work hotspots in Dnipro, Ukraine (December 2017 to March 2018). A portion of the HIV reverse transcriptase gene (n = 13; 62% WSW, 38% MWPS) and HCV NS5B gene (n = 46; 70% WSW, 30% MWPS) were sequenced from dried blood spot specimens. Tip-to-tip distances on phylogenetic trees were used to infer phylogenetic clusters for identifying potential transmission clusters.

Results: Phylogenetic analyses identified two HIV clusters containing four sequences (50% WSW; 50% MWPS) and 11 HCV clusters containing 31 sequences - the majority comprising infections in WSW (83.9%). Nearly half (45.4%) of HCV clusters contained at least one WSW with a history of injecting drugs.

Conclusions: Joint analyses of HIV and HCV signal overlap in sex work and injecting networks in Ukraine, suggesting implications for the comprehensive coverage of prevention programs for WSW including harm reduction services. Conducting phylogenetic analyses with HCV may provide a more complete appraisal of underlying transmission networks than HIV alone, particularly in the context of high HIV treatment coverage yielding viral suppression.

联合艾滋病毒和丙型肝炎病毒系统发育分析显示,从事性工作的女性和嫖娼男性之间存在网络重叠。
背景:艾滋病病毒(HIV)和丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)的传播在很大程度上受到发生危险行为的性网络或注射网络中复杂互动关系的影响。在乌克兰,从事性工作的女性(WSW)和购买性服务的男性(MWPS)受到这两种病毒的影响尤为严重。我们的研究旨在调查潜在网络对 HIV 和 HCV 传播的影响:我们对乌克兰第聂伯罗市性工作热点地区的 560 名 WSW 和 370 名 MWPS 进行了横断面综合生物行为调查(2017 年 12 月至 2018 年 3 月)。从干血斑标本中对部分 HIV 逆转录酶基因(n = 13;62% WSW,38% MWPS)和 HCV NS5B 基因(n = 46;70% WSW,30% MWPS)进行了测序。系统发生树的尖端到尖端距离用于推断系统发生集群,以确定潜在的传播集群:系统发生学分析确定了两个包含 4 个序列的 HIV 群(50% WSW;50% MWPS)和 11 个包含 31 个序列的 HCV 群,其中大多数是 WSW 感染(83.9%)。近一半(45.4%)的 HCV 群体中至少有一名 WSW 有注射毒品史:对艾滋病毒和丙型肝炎病毒的联合分析显示,乌克兰的性工作和注射网络中存在重叠现象,这对全面覆盖 WSW 预防计划(包括减少伤害服务)具有重要意义。与单独分析艾滋病病毒相比,对丙型肝炎病毒进行系统发育分析可以更全面地评估潜在的传播网络,尤其是在艾滋病病毒治疗覆盖率高、病毒抑制率高的情况下。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
7.10%
发文量
144
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of STD & AIDS provides a clinically oriented forum for investigating and treating sexually transmissible infections, HIV and AIDS. Publishing original research and practical papers, the journal contains in-depth review articles, short papers, case reports, audit reports, CPD papers and a lively correspondence column. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
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