1. National surveillance of HIV-1 subtypes for England and Wales: design, methods, and initial findings.
- Author
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Parry JV, Murphy G, Barlow KL, Lewis K, Rogers PA, Belda FJ, Nicoll A, McGarrigle C, Cliffe S, Mortimer PP, and Clewley JP
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Algorithms, England epidemiology, Female, Genotype, HIV Infections complications, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Male, RNA, Viral analysis, Risk Factors, Serotyping, Sexuality, Sexually Transmitted Diseases complications, Sexually Transmitted Diseases virology, Substance Abuse, Intravenous complications, Substance Abuse, Intravenous virology, Wales epidemiology, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 classification
- Abstract
The HIV-1 infections detected in an ongoing national unlinked anonymous HIV surveillance program were subtyped and analyzed according to demographic and risk characteristics. Of the 893 anti--HIV-1--positive specimens allocated to an exposure group, 70% could be subtyped. Almost 25% of infections subtyped were non-B, mostly subtypes A, C, and D. Non-B infections were rare in homosexual and bisexual men and in drug injectors. Forty percent of infections in heterosexual men attending genitourinary medicine clinics were non-B subtypes; of these, 25% were subtype A infections and 59% were subtype C infections. For female clinic attendees, 61% were non-B subtype infections, of which 48% were subtype A infections and 42% were subtype C infections. Of the clinic attendees born in the United Kingdom and Europe, 14% of the men and 35% of the women were infected with non-B subtypes. In contrast, 78% of infections in antenatal patients were non-B subtypes, of which 61% were subtype A and 29% were subtype C. Extrapolation to the estimated 29,700 prevalent adult infections in the United Kingdom indicates that approximately 8,100 (27%) such infections are non-B subtypes and that these are found almost entirely in heterosexuals. The findings suggest spread of infection of non-B subtypes to heterosexuals born in the United Kingdom from individuals infected in regions of high prevalence.
- Published
- 2001
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