The Dominican Republic (DR) has the second-highest prevalence of HIV infection in the Caribbean, but viral suppression and treatment adherence are not well understood. We conducted a cross-sectional study among people living with HIV/AIDS(PLWHA) to fill in the knowledge gap. Questionnaire was used to collect demographic data, antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence, and barriers and facilitators to HIV care. Viral load and other clinical information were extracted through chart reviews. Descriptive analyzes and logistic regression were conducted to explore factors associated with non-viral suppression and imperfect ART adherence. Of 193 PLWHA 83.9% were virally suppressed. Those that were non-virally suppressed were more likely of being male (odds ratio [OR]: 2.55, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.17-5.58) and less likely of being unemployed (OR: 0.28, 95% CI: 0.08-0.96). However, being male (OR: 0.78, 95% CI:0.40-1.53) and unemployed (OR: 0.28, 95% CI:0. 08-1.21) were less likely to report imperfect adherence. Tailored interventions are needed to improve adherence and viral suppression in DR.
Background Surveillance of transmitted drug resistance (TDR) and molecular epidemiology of newly diagnosed persons with HIV can impact care and prevention and inform efforts towards ending the HIV epidemic. Both interventions are not routinely available in the Dominican Republic (DO). Methods During 10/2019-4/2021, we attempted to enroll all newly HIV-diagnosed antiretroviral naïve adults (≥18 years) presenting at the regional hospital in Santiago, DO. Demographic, clinical and laboratory data were collected, and blood samples obtained for partial pol genotyping. Subtyping and resistance interpretation were done with Stanford Database tools. Maximum likelihood phylogenies were inferred by RAxML and clusters were defined as clades with bootstrap support of ≥0.8. Extended phylogenetic analyses included ∼1,500 publicly available Caribbean sequences. Demographics and TDR were compared by cluster status using Fisher Exact or Wilcoxon rank sum tests. Results Of 100 HIV-diagnosed participants (mean age 40 years; 61% male; 84% heterosexual; 50% never tested prior), 56% were hospitalized, 48% tested via doctor advise and 28% for feeling sick. Available CD4 count was < 200 cells/µL in 49% (43/87) more prevalent (vs CD4 >200) in heterosexuals (93% vs 7% in gay/bisexuals; p=0.003). Genotyping from 68/100, were 29% HIV-1 subtype B, 69% B-containing recombinants and one HIV-1 subtype C. TDR was in 12% (95% CI: 5-22%), all to NNRTIs (K103N and Y188L most common; two with multiple mutations). Six identified clusters included 25% of participants, 92% from downtown Santiago. Individuals in the largest 6-member cluster met partners online and were gay/bisexual. Participants in clusters had higher TDR (24% vs 8%, p=0.100), were younger (34 vs 43 years, p=0.01), and were gay/bisexual (41% vs 8%, p=0.003). In extended phylogenetic analyses participant sequences clustered with other DO sequences, as well as some from Haiti. Conclusion In this snapshot of new HIV diagnoses in the DO, findings of high AIDS at diagnosis, particularly in heterosexuals, high TDR, more clustering in gay/bisexual younger individuals, and existing non-local-only transmission networks, should inform focused surveillance and prevention strategies to disrupt HIV transmission and improve care. Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures.
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