BMC Medicine (Jan 2019)

HIV-1 molecular transmission clusters in nine European countries and Canada: association with demographic and clinical factors

  • Dimitrios Paraskevis,
  • Apostolos Beloukas,
  • Kostantinos Stasinos,
  • Nikos Pantazis,
  • Carmen de Mendoza,
  • Norbert Bannert,
  • Laurence Meyer,
  • Robert Zangerle,
  • John Gill,
  • Maria Prins,
  • Antonella d’Arminio Montforte,
  • Anne-Marte Bakken Kran,
  • Kholoud Porter,
  • Giota Touloumi,
  • on behalf of the CASCADE collaboration of EuroCoord

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-018-1241-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Knowledge of HIV-1 molecular transmission clusters (MTCs) is important, especially in large-scale datasets, for designing prevention programmes and public health intervention strategies. We used a large-scale HIV-1 sequence dataset from nine European HIV cohorts and one Canadian, to identify MTCs and investigate factors associated with the probability of belonging to MTCs. Methods To identify MTCs, we applied maximum likelihood inferences on partial pol sequences from 8955 HIV-positive individuals linked to demographic and clinical data. MTCs were defined using two different criteria: clusters with bootstrap support >75% (phylogenetic confidence criterion) and clusters consisting of sequences from a specific region at a proportion of >75% (geographic criterion) compared to the total number of sequences within the network. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to assess factors associated with MTC clustering. Results Although 3700 (41%) sequences belonged to MTCs, proportions differed substantially by country and subtype, ranging from 7% among UK subtype C sequences to 63% among German subtype B sequences. The probability of belonging to an MTC was independently less likely for women than men (OR = 0.66; P 40%) of individuals belonged to MTCs. Notably, the HIV epidemic dispersal appears to be driven by subtype B viruses spread within MSM networks. Expansion of regional epidemics seems mainly associated with recent MTCs, rather than the growth of older, established ones. This information is important for designing prevention and public health intervention strategies.

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