Emerging Infectious Diseases (Aug 2005)

HIV-1 Genetic Diversity in Antenatal Cohort, Canada

  • Bertine S. Akouamba,
  • Janique Viel,
  • Hugues Charest,
  • Natacha Merindol,
  • Johanne Samson,
  • Normand Lapointe,
  • Bluma G. Brenner,
  • Richard Lalonde,
  • P. Richard Harrigan,
  • Marc Boucher,
  • Hugo Soudeyns

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1108.040877
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
pp. 1230 – 1234

Abstract

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We studied HIV genetic diversity in a cohort of 127 pregnant, HIV-infected women who received prenatal care at Sainte-Justine Hospital in Montreal, Canada, between 1999 and 2003. Clade assignments were derived by phylogenetic analysis of amplified pol sequences. Genotyping was successful in 103 of 127 women, 59 (57.3%) of whom were infected with clade B HIV-1, and 44 (42.7%) with nonclade B viruses, including subtypes A, C, D, F, G, and H. Four sequences remained unassigned. Forty-three of 44 women infected with non-clade B viruses were newcomers from sub-Saharan Africa, and subtype identity was consistent with those circulating in their countries of origin. These results highlight the epidemiologic importance of non-B HIV-1 in antenatal populations in a large North American urban center, underscore the influence of population movements on clade intermixing, and identify a group of patients who could be targeted for surveillance and drug therapy followup.

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