1. Sexual Practice Changes Post-HIV Diagnosis Among Men Who Have Sex with Men in the United States: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
- Author
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Malekinejad, Mohsen, Jimsheleishvili, Sopiko, Barker, Erin K, Hutchinson, Angela B, Shrestha, Ram K, Volberding, Paul, and Kahn, James G
- Subjects
Humans ,HIV Infections ,Risk-Taking ,Sexual Behavior ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Sexual Partners ,United States ,Male ,HIV Serosorting ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,HIV diagnosis ,Men who have sex with men ,Sero-adaptive behaviors ,Systematic review ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Infectious Diseases ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Infection ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social Work ,Public Health - Abstract
Men who have sex with men (MSM) often change sexual behaviors following HIV diagnosis. This systematic review examined such changes, including sero-adaptive behaviors (i.e., deliberate safer-sex practices to reduce transmission risk) to better understand the magnitude of their association with HIV diagnosis. We searched four databases (1996-2017) and reviewed references from other systematic reviews. We included studies conducted in the United States that compared sexual behavior among HIV-infected "aware" versus "unaware" MSM. We meta-analytically pooled RRs and associated 95% confidence intervals (CI) using random-effects models, and assessed risk of bias and evidence quality. Twenty studies reported k = 131 effect sizes on sexual practices outcomes, most of which reported changes in unprotected sex (k = 85), and on sex with at-risk partners (k = 76); 11 reported sero-adaptive behaviors. Unprotected anal intercourse with an HIV-uninfected/unknown-status partner was less likely among aware MSM (insertive position: k = 2, RR 0.26, 95% CI 0.17, 0.41; receptive position: k = 2, RR 0.53, 95% CI 0.37, 0.77). Risk of not always serosorting among aware MSM (k = 3) was RR = 0.92 (0.83, 1.02). Existing evidence, although low-quality, suggests that HIV-infected MSM tend to adopt safer sexual practices once aware of their diagnosis. Variation in reporting of outcomes limits their comparability. Sero-adaptive behavior data are sparse.
- Published
- 2023