Why do HIV-1 subtypes segregate among persons with different risk behaviors in South Africa and Thailand?
- PMID: 9110084
- DOI: 10.1097/00002030-199701000-00017
Why do HIV-1 subtypes segregate among persons with different risk behaviors in South Africa and Thailand?
Abstract
PIP: Initial research on the genetic variability of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 has indicated that HIV-1 envelope subtype B is dominant in Western countries where homosexuality and injecting drug use are the major risk factors, while env subtypes A, C, D, and E predominate in Africa and Asia where most transmission is heterosexual. Data from South Africa and Thailand suggest that, due to limited mixing of population subgroups, largely independent HIV epidemics caused by different genotypic subgroups may co-exist in a given geographic area. On the other hand, the possibility that HIV-1 subtypes differ in transmission efficiency by exposure mode also has some support. For example, subtypes E and C appear to be better adapted to penile-vaginal transmission, while subtypes B, E, and C may be transmitted efficiently through blood. Factors such as sexual mixing patterns (e.g., commercial sex work) and the prevalence of sexually transmitted diseases must also be considered when examining HIV-1 subtype transmission differences. The use of new assays that allow for the accurate measurement of viral levels in plasma, semen, and genital secretions should complement epidemiologic estimates of transmission efficiency for various HIV-1 subtypes.
Comment on
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An association between HIV-1 subtypes and mode of transmission in Cape Town, South Africa.AIDS. 1997 Jan;11(1):81-7. doi: 10.1097/00002030-199701000-00012. AIDS. 1997. PMID: 9110079
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