Epidemiologic evidence for time variation in HIV infectivity.

S C Shiboski, N S Padian
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引用次数: 40

Abstract

Data from three epidemiologic studies of heterosexual transmission of HIV among monogamous couples are used to assess evidence for time variation in HIV infectivity, possibly related to varying levels of infectiousness following infection in the primary infected partner. Analyses are based on statistical techniques that account for the inherent incompleteness of exposure information from such studies, and that allow direct assessment of the hypotheses that infectivity varies with time since infection and across partnerships. Data include findings from 302 couples from the California Partners' Study and 51 and 31 couples, respectively, from two U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-sponsored studies of infection in partners of transfusion recipients. Results indicate weak evidence for higher infectivity following infection of the primary partner, decreasing to relatively lower levels from 2 to 10 years after. Although these findings are consistent with biologic observations of time variation in viral levels, other explanations of the observed pattern (e.g., heterogeneity of infectivity) are equally plausible, pointing out some inherent limitations of data from such studies.

HIV传染性时间变化的流行病学证据。
三项关于一夫一妻制夫妇之间异性传播艾滋病毒的流行病学研究的数据被用来评估艾滋病毒传染性的时间变化证据,这可能与最初受感染的伴侣感染后的传染性水平不同有关。分析基于统计技术,这些技术解释了此类研究中暴露信息固有的不完整性,并允许直接评估感染性随感染后时间和伙伴关系而变化的假设。数据包括来自加利福尼亚伴侣研究的302对夫妇,以及分别来自美国疾病控制和预防中心(CDC)赞助的两项关于输血接受者伴侣感染的研究的51对和31对夫妇的发现。结果表明,有微弱证据表明,感染第一性伴侣后的传染性较高,在2至10年后下降到相对较低的水平。尽管这些发现与病毒水平时间变化的生物学观察结果一致,但对观察到的模式(例如,传染性的异质性)的其他解释同样合理,指出了此类研究数据的一些固有局限性。
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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