» Articles » PMID: 24451158

The Origin and Emergence of an HIV-1 Epidemic: from Introduction to Endemicity

Overview
Journal AIDS
Date 2014 Jan 24
PMID 24451158
Citations 8
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objectives: To describe, at patient-level detail, the determining events and factors involved in the development of a country's HIV-1 epidemic.

Design: Clinical information for all recorded Greenlandic HIV-1 patients was analysed and correlated with both novel and previously analysed pol sequences, representing more than half of the entire Greenlandic HIV-1 epidemic. Archival blood samples were sequenced to link early infection chain descriptions to the subsequent epidemic.

Methods: In-depth phylogenetic analyses were used in synergy with clinical information to assess number of introductions of HIV-1 into Greenland, the source of geographic origin, time of epidemic introduction and its epidemiological characteristics such as initial transmission chain, geographic dispersal within Greenland, method of infection, cluster size, sociological and behavioural factors.

Results: Despite its small population size and isolated geographic location, data support at least 25 introductions of HIV-1 into Greenland. Only a single of these led to an epidemic. This introduction occurred between 1985 and 1986, and the epidemic cluster is still active. Facilitating factors for the emergence and spread of the epidemic cluster include a rapid transition from MSM to heterosexual spread, high prevalence of other sexually transmitted diseases, rapid dispersal to larger cities and early emergence in a distinct subpopulation with high-risk behaviour including disregard for condomizing.

Conclusions: The synergistic use of disparate data categories yields such unique detail, that the Greenland epidemic now serves as a model example for the epidemic emergence of HIV-1 in a society. This renders it suitable for testing of present and future sequence-based epidemiological methodologies.

Citing Articles

Phylogeographic Assessment Reveals Geographic Sources of HIV-1 Dissemination Among Men Who Have Sex With Men in Kenya.

Nduva G, Otieno F, Kimani J, McKinnon L, Cholette F, Sandstrom P Front Microbiol. 2022; 13:843330.

PMID: 35356525 PMC: 8959701. DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.843330.


Transmitted HIV-1 is more virulent in heterosexual individuals than men-who-have-sex-with-men.

James A, Dixit N PLoS Pathog. 2022; 18(3):e1010319.

PMID: 35271687 PMC: 8912199. DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1010319.


The Role of Phylogenetics in Discerning HIV-1 Mixing among Vulnerable Populations and Geographic Regions in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Systematic Review.

Nduva G, Nazziwa J, Hassan A, Sanders E, Esbjornsson J Viruses. 2021; 13(6).

PMID: 34205246 PMC: 8235305. DOI: 10.3390/v13061174.


Evaluation of HIV Transmission Clusters among Natives and Foreigners Living in Italy.

Fabeni L, Santoro M, Lorenzini P, Rusconi S, Gianotti N, Costantini A Viruses. 2020; 12(8).

PMID: 32718024 PMC: 7472346. DOI: 10.3390/v12080791.


HIV-1 Transmission Patterns Within and Between Risk Groups in Coastal Kenya.

Nduva G, Hassan A, Nazziwa J, Graham S, Esbjornsson J, Sanders E Sci Rep. 2020; 10(1):6775.

PMID: 32317722 PMC: 7174422. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-63731-z.