Acute HIV infection transmission among people who inject drugs in a mature epidemic setting
Authored by Brandon D L Marshall, Sandro Galea, Daniel J Escudero, Mark N Lurie, Kenneth H Mayer, Caleb Weinreb, Maximilian King, Samuel R Friedman
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1097/qad.0000000000001218
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Objective:Estimates for the contribution of transmission arising from
acute HIV infections (AHIs) to overall HIV incidence vary significantly.
Furthermore, little is known about AHI-attributable transmission among
people who inject drugs (PWID), including the extent to which
interventions targeting chronic infections (e.g. HAART as prevention)
are limited by AHI transmission. Thus, we estimated the proportion of
transmission events attributable to AHI within the mature HIV epidemic
among PWID in New York City (NYC).Design:Modeling study.Methods:We
constructed an interactive sexual and injecting transmission network
using an agent-based model simulating the HIV epidemic in NYC between
1996 and 2012. Using stochastic microsimulations, we cataloged
transmission from PWID based on the disease stage of index agents to
determine the proportion of infections transmitted during AHI (in
primary analyses, assumed to last 3 months).Results:Our calibrated model
approximated the epidemiological features of the mature HIV epidemic in
NYC between 1996 and 2012. Annual HIV incidence among PWID dropped from
approximately 1.8\% in 1996 to 0.7\% in 2012. Over the 16-year period, AHI accounted for 4.9\% (10th/90th percentile: 0.1-12.3\%) of incident
HIV cases among PWID. The annualized contribution of AHI increased over
this period from 3.6\% in 1996 to 5.9\% in 2012.Conclusion:Our results
suggest that, in mature epidemics such as NYC, between 3\% and 6\% of
transmission events are attributable to AHI among PWID. Current HIV
treatment as prevention strategies are unlikely to be substantially
affected by AHI-attributable transmission among PWID populations in
mature epidemic settings.
Tags
Risk
Prevalence
Prevention
Metaanalysis
Us metropolitan-areas
Network characteristics
Antiretroviral therapy
Viral load
Users
Stage