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HIV-1-Transmitted Drug Resistance and Transmission Clusters in Newly Diagnosed Patients in Portugal Between 2014 and 2019

Authors :
Marta Pingarilho
Victor Pimentel
Mafalda N. S. Miranda
Ana Rita Silva
António Diniz
Bianca Branco Ascenção
Carmela Piñeiro
Carmo Koch
Catarina Rodrigues
Cátia Caldas
Célia Morais
Domitília Faria
Elisabete Gomes da Silva
Eugénio Teófilo
Fátima Monteiro
Fausto Roxo
Fernando Maltez
Fernando Rodrigues
Guilhermina Gaião
Helena Ramos
Inês Costa
Isabel Germano
Joana Simões
Joaquim Oliveira
José Ferreira
José Poças
José Saraiva da Cunha
Jorge Soares
Júlia Henriques
Kamal Mansinho
Liliana Pedro
Maria João Aleixo
Maria João Gonçalves
Maria José Manata
Margarida Mouro
Margarida Serrado
Micaela Caixeiro
Nuno Marques
Olga Costa
Patrícia Pacheco
Paula Proença
Paulo Rodrigues
Raquel Pinho
Raquel Tavares
Ricardo Correia de Abreu
Rita Côrte-Real
Rosário Serrão
Rui Sarmento e Castro
Sofia Nunes
Telo Faria
Teresa Baptista
Maria Rosário O. Martins
Perpétua Gomes
Luís Mendão
Daniel Simões
Ana Abecasis
Source :
Frontiers in microbiology. 13
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ObjectiveTo describe and analyze transmitted drug resistance (TDR) between 2014 and 2019 in newly infected patients with HIV-1 in Portugal and to characterize its transmission networks.MethodsClinical, socioepidemiological, and risk behavior data were collected from 820 newly diagnosed patients in Portugal between September 2014 and December 2019. The sequences obtained from drug resistance testing were used for subtyping, TDR determination, and transmission cluster (TC) analyses.ResultsIn Portugal, the overall prevalence of TDR between 2014 and 2019 was 11.0%. TDR presented a decreasing trend from 16.7% in 2014 to 9.2% in 2016 (pfor–trend = 0.114). Multivariate analysis indicated that TDR was significantly associated with transmission route (MSM presented a lower probability of presenting TDR when compared to heterosexual contact) and with subtype (subtype C presented significantly more TDR when compared to subtype B). TC analysis corroborated that the heterosexual risk group presented a higher proportion of TDR in TCs when compared to MSMs. Among subtype A1, TDR reached 16.6% in heterosexuals, followed by 14.2% in patients infected with subtype B and 9.4% in patients infected with subtype G.ConclusionOur molecular epidemiology approach indicates that the HIV-1 epidemic in Portugal is changing among risk group populations, with heterosexuals showing increasing levels of HIV-1 transmission and TDR. Prevention measures for this subpopulation should be reinforced.

Details

ISSN :
1664302X
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....afd9871894882cf3353c9e4e4bef5d0d