2020
DOI: 10.3390/v12030331
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Phylogenetic and Demographic Characterization of Directed HIV-1 Transmission Using Deep Sequences from High-Risk and General Population Cohorts/Groups in Uganda

Abstract: Across sub-Saharan Africa, key populations with elevated HIV-1 incidence and/or prevalence have been identified, but their contribution to disease spread remains unclear. We performed viral deep-sequence phylogenetic analyses to quantify transmission dynamics between the general population (GP), fisherfolk communities (FF), and women at high risk of infection and their clients (WHR) in central and southwestern Uganda. Between August 2014 and August 2017, 6185 HIV-1 positive individuals were enrolled in 3 GP an… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Potential viral transmission in this study was associated with being ART naïve, being female and being above 25 years of age. The observation that the risk of HIV transmission was associated with older individuals >25 years is consistent with findings from our recent study [ 24 ]. An estimated 20.5% (84/409) of all pairs identified consisted of female-female pairs suggesting a larger proportion of unreached men in inferred HIV transmission networks that are still problematic in HIV intervention efforts and present challenges in molecular epidemiological analyses.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…Potential viral transmission in this study was associated with being ART naïve, being female and being above 25 years of age. The observation that the risk of HIV transmission was associated with older individuals >25 years is consistent with findings from our recent study [ 24 ]. An estimated 20.5% (84/409) of all pairs identified consisted of female-female pairs suggesting a larger proportion of unreached men in inferred HIV transmission networks that are still problematic in HIV intervention efforts and present challenges in molecular epidemiological analyses.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…This also implies that partner exchange rates within the rural communities may be lower relative to those in the neighbouring urban areas. The heterogeneity of the HIV-1 epidemic in the GPC (situated about 16 km from the trans-African highway) and neighbouring high-risk populations like the fishing communities (approximately 40 km apart) has previously been described [ 7 ] and the viral migration patterns inferred in this study fit well with a diffusion model that supports the flow of virus from this low risk cohort to other higher-risk populations [ 23 , 24 , 68 ]. Nonetheless, the term ‘lower-risk population’ is a subjective over-simplification of the dynamics of HIV-1 transmission in the GPC as shown by the presence of large HIV-1 clusters and the inferred viral migration patterns.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…For example, an HIV cluster in rural southeastern Indiana grew rapidly in 2015 but underwent slow growth for nearly a decade prior (Campbell, et al, 2017). The nearest connect neighbor method yields results similar to a non-exhaustive search for all minimum spanning trees, as has been previously described (Bbosa, et al, 2020;Campbell, et al, 2017). The threshold and nearest connected neighbor filters are not mutually exclusive and can therefore be applied simultaneously to ensure that genetically distant nodes remain disconnected.…”
Section: Arbitrary Genetic Distance Networkmentioning
confidence: 78%