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HIV Care Prioritization Using Phylogenetic Branch Length.

Authors :
Moshiri, Niema
Moshiri, Niema
Source :
Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999); vol 86, iss 5, 626-637; 1525-4135
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BackgroundThe structure of the HIV transmission networks can be dictated by just a few individuals. Public health intervention, such as ensuring people living with HIV adhere to antiretroviral therapy and remain virally suppressed, can help control the spread of the virus. However, such intervention requires using limited public health resource allocations. Determining which individuals are most at risk of transmitting HIV could allow public health officials to focus their limited resources on these individuals.SettingMolecular epidemiology can help prioritize people living with HIV by patterns of transmission inferred from their sampled viral sequences. Such prioritization has been previously suggested and performed by monitoring cluster growth. In this article, we introduce Prioritization using AnCesTral edge lengths (ProACT), a phylogenetic approach for prioritizing individuals living with HIV.MethodsProACT starts from a phylogeny inferred from sequence data and orders individuals according to their terminal branch length, breaking ties using ancestral branch lengths. We evaluated ProACT on a real data set of 926 HIV-1 subtype B pol data obtained in San Diego between 2005 and 2014 and a simulation data set modeling the same epidemic. Prioritization methods are compared by their ability to predict individuals who transmit most after the prioritization.ResultsAcross all simulation conditions and most real data sampling conditions, ProACT outperformed monitoring cluster growth for multiple metrics of prioritization efficacy.ConclusionThe simple strategy used by ProACT improves the effectiveness of prioritization compared with state-of-the-art methods that rely on monitoring the growth of transmission clusters defined based on genetic distance.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999); vol 86, iss 5, 626-637; 1525-4135
Notes :
Moshiri, Niema, Smith, Davey M, Mirarab, Siavash
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367468022
Document Type :
Electronic Resource