HIV seroprevalence, incidence, and viral suppression among Ugandan female bar workers: a population-based study.

Xinyi Feng, Gertrude Nakigozi, Eshan U Patel, Caitlin E Kennedy, Slisha Shrestha, Fred Nalugoda, Godfrey Kigozi, Robert Ssekubugu, Larry W Chang, Andrea L Wirtz, Hadijja Nakawooya, Grace Kigozi, Ronald M Galiwango, Steven J Reynolds, Joseph Kagaayi, Aaron A R Tobian, M Kate Grabowski
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Prior studies have linked female bar and sex work in Africa. However, population-level data on HIV burden among female bar workers (FBWs) in African settings are rare.

Methods: We used five survey rounds of data collected between 2011 and 2020 from the Rakai Community Cohort Study, a population-based HIV surveillance cohort in 36 inland agrarian and trading communities (HIV prevalence ~12%) and four Lake Victoria fishing communities (~36%) in southern Uganda. Women reporting bar work as a primary or secondary occupation were identified and compared to non-FBWs. Primary outcomes included laboratory-confirmed HIV seropositivity, incident infection, viral suppression (<200 copies/ml) among women with HIV, and population prevalence of viremia. Prevalence ratios (PRs) and incidence rate ratios (IRRs) were estimated using Poisson regression models with 95% confidence intervals (95%CI).

Findings: A total of 23,556 female participants contributed 52,708 person visits. Overall, 1,205 (5.1%) women self-identified as FBWs. FBWs had significantly higher baseline HIV seroprevalence compared to non-FBWs (51.9% vs. 18.5%,PR=2.81, 95%CI=2.64-2.95). 356 HIV incident events occurred over 39,228 years of participant follow-up. Incidence among FBWs was 2.49/100 person-years versus 0.87/100 person-years among non-FBWs (age-adjusted IRR=3.64,95%CI=2.33-5.42). While HIV viral suppression was similar among participants living with HIV regardless of FBW status, the population prevalence of HIV viremia among FBWs was 1.69 times higher compared to non-FBWs, adjusting for age and community type (95%CI=1.38-2.08). Among 179 HIV seronegative FBWs surveyed in 2018-20, 79.9% (143/179) were aware of PrEP, while only 13.4% (24/179) had ever used it, and just 2.8% (5/179) were current users.

Interpretation: FBWs in Uganda experience substantially higher HIV burden and acquisition risk compared to the general population. Tailored prevention strategies like prioritizing their HIV service delivery may reduce HIV incidence among FBWs and their partners.

Funding: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health.

乌干达酒吧女工的艾滋病毒血清流行率、发病率和病毒抑制率:一项基于人口的研究。
背景:先前的研究将非洲的女性酒吧从业者与性工作联系在一起。然而,有关非洲女性酒吧从业者(FBWs)艾滋病负担的人口级数据却非常罕见:我们使用了 2011 年至 2020 年期间从拉凯社区队列研究(Rakai Community Cohort Study)中收集的五轮调查数据,该研究是对乌干达南部 36 个内陆农业和贸易社区(HIV 感染率约为 12%)和 4 个维多利亚湖渔业社区(约为 36%)进行的一项基于人口的 HIV 监测队列研究。研究人员对以酒吧工作为主要或次要职业的妇女进行了识别,并将其与非从事酒吧工作的妇女进行了比较。主要结果包括实验室确证的 HIV 血清阳性反应、偶发感染、病毒抑制(研究结果:共有 23 556 名女性参与者进行了 52 708 人次的访问。总体而言,1 205 名(5.1%)女性自我认定为家庭预算妇女。与非肥胖妇女相比,肥胖妇女的基线 HIV 血清阳性率明显更高(51.9% 对 18.5%,PR=2.81,95%CI=2.64-2.95)。在 39,228 年的参与者随访中,共发生了 356 例艾滋病事件。肥胖妇女的发病率为 2.49/100人年,而非肥胖妇女的发病率为 0.87/100人年(年龄调整后 IRR=3.64,95%CI=2.33-5.42)。虽然无论是否为家庭福利工作者,HIV 病毒抑制率在 HIV 感染者中都是相似的,但与非家庭福利工作者相比,经年龄和社区类型调整后,家庭福利工作者的 HIV 病毒血症流行率是非家庭福利工作者的 1.69 倍(95%CI=1.38-2.08)。在2018-20年接受调查的179名HIV血清阴性FBW中,79.9%(143/179)的人知道PrEP,但只有13.4%(24/179)的人曾经使用过,只有2.8%(5/179)的人正在使用:与普通人群相比,乌干达的家庭边远妇女承受着更高的艾滋病负担和感染风险。有针对性的预防策略,如优先为其提供艾滋病服务,可能会降低家庭主妇及其伴侣的艾滋病发病率:美国国立卫生研究院国家过敏与传染病研究所。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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