Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Bao L. L., Vidal Nicole, Fang H., Deng W., Chen S., Guo W. Z., Qin C., Peeters Martine, Delaporte Eric, Andrieu J. M., Lu Wei. (2008). Molecular tracing of sexual HIV type 1 transmission in the southwest border of China. AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 24 (5), p. 733-742. ISSN 0889-2229.

Titre du document
Molecular tracing of sexual HIV type 1 transmission in the southwest border of China
Année de publication
2008
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000256519300009
Auteurs
Bao L. L., Vidal Nicole, Fang H., Deng W., Chen S., Guo W. Z., Qin C., Peeters Martine, Delaporte Eric, Andrieu J. M., Lu Wei
Source
AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2008, 24 (5), p. 733-742 ISSN 0889-2229
Since the first outbreak of HIV-1 was reported in heroin users in China in 1989, HIV-1 has spread steadily among injection drug users, leading to an exponential growth of nationwide outbreaks from 1998 to 2004. However, the impact of sexual transmission on outbreaks of HIV in China's general population is still unclear. Through a governmental HIV/AIDS surveillance program, an HIV serological study was conducted in volunteers between 1996 and 2005 in Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture of Yunnan province. We performed the transmission reconstruction by molecular epidemiological tracing in a subset of the HIV-1-seropositive individuals diagnosed during this survey. Neighbor joining and maximum likelihood trees based on the HIV-1 pol and env genes were implemented to provide information on putative epidemiological links, which were then confirmed by contact tracing. Of 25,390 volunteers, 501 (2%) accumulated cases of HIV-1 infection (21.1% in needle-sharing drug users, 77.3% in heterosexual adults, 0.4% in homosexual adults, and 1.2% in children born from infected mothers) were diagnosed. Among 44 heterosexually infected and antiretroviral-naive local-traceable individuals (27 infected with HIV-1 subtype CRF01_AE, 15 with CRF08_BC, 1 with G, and 1 with a new B/C recombinant), 18 (40.9%) were coclustered into 8 transmission chains with an average size of 2.25 infections per chain. Phylogenetic and epidemiological linkages confirmed eight heterosexual transmission events. This is the first report providing molecular epidemiological evidence of heterosexual transmission of HIV-1 in China's general population. The reconstruction of transmission of current HIV-1 outbreaks by molecular epidemiological tracing is instrumental in identifying sources of the epidemic and in defining prevention strategies.
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010042634]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010042634
Contact