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HIV-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in Pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade

Pakistan is considered by the World Health Organization to currently have a “concentrated” HIV-1 epidemic due to a rapid rise in infections among people who inject drugs (PWID). Prevalence among the country’s nearly 105,000 PWID is estimated to be 37.8% but has been shown to be higher in several lar...

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Autores principales: Cholette, François, Joy, Jeffrey, Pelcat, Yann, Thompson, Laura H., Pilon, Richard, Ho, John, Capina, Rupert, Archibald, Chris, Blanchard, James F., Emmanuel, Faran, Reza, Tahira, Dar, Nosheen, Harrigan, Richard, Kim, John, Sandstrom, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7454939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32857765
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237560
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author Cholette, François
Joy, Jeffrey
Pelcat, Yann
Thompson, Laura H.
Pilon, Richard
Ho, John
Capina, Rupert
Archibald, Chris
Blanchard, James F.
Emmanuel, Faran
Reza, Tahira
Dar, Nosheen
Harrigan, Richard
Kim, John
Sandstrom, Paul
author_facet Cholette, François
Joy, Jeffrey
Pelcat, Yann
Thompson, Laura H.
Pilon, Richard
Ho, John
Capina, Rupert
Archibald, Chris
Blanchard, James F.
Emmanuel, Faran
Reza, Tahira
Dar, Nosheen
Harrigan, Richard
Kim, John
Sandstrom, Paul
author_sort Cholette, François
collection PubMed
description Pakistan is considered by the World Health Organization to currently have a “concentrated” HIV-1 epidemic due to a rapid rise in infections among people who inject drugs (PWID). Prevalence among the country’s nearly 105,000 PWID is estimated to be 37.8% but has been shown to be higher in several large urban centers. A lack of public health resources, the common use of professional injectors and unsafe injection practices are believed to have fueled the outbreak. Here we evaluate the molecular characteristics of HIV-1 sequences (n = 290) from PWID in several Pakistani cities to examine transmission dynamics and the association between rates of HIV-1 transmission with regards to regional trends in opioid trafficking. Tip-to-tip (patristic) distance based phylogenetic cluster inferences and BEAST2 Bayesian phylodynamic analyses of time-stamped data were performed on HIV-1 pol sequences generated from dried blood spots collected from 1,453 PWID as part of a cross-sectional survey conducted in Pakistan during 2014/2015. Overall, subtype A1 strains were dominant (75.2%) followed by CRF02_AG (14.1%), recombinants/unassigned (7.2%), CRF35_AD (2.1%), G (1.0%) and C (0.3%). Nearly three quarters of the PWID HIV-1 sequences belonged to one of five distinct phylogenetic clusters. Just below half (44.4%) of individuals in the largest cluster (n = 118) did seek help injecting from professional injectors which was previously identified as a strong correlate of HIV-1 infection. Spikes in estimated HIV-1 effective population sizes coincided with increases in opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan, Pakistan’s western neighbor. Structured coalescent analysis was undertaken in order to investigate the spatial relationship of HIV-1 transmission among the various cities under study. In general terms, our analysis placed the city of Larkana at the center of the PWID HIV-1 epidemic in Pakistan which is consistent with previous epidemiological data.
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spelling pubmed-74549392020-09-02 HIV-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in Pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade Cholette, François Joy, Jeffrey Pelcat, Yann Thompson, Laura H. Pilon, Richard Ho, John Capina, Rupert Archibald, Chris Blanchard, James F. Emmanuel, Faran Reza, Tahira Dar, Nosheen Harrigan, Richard Kim, John Sandstrom, Paul PLoS One Research Article Pakistan is considered by the World Health Organization to currently have a “concentrated” HIV-1 epidemic due to a rapid rise in infections among people who inject drugs (PWID). Prevalence among the country’s nearly 105,000 PWID is estimated to be 37.8% but has been shown to be higher in several large urban centers. A lack of public health resources, the common use of professional injectors and unsafe injection practices are believed to have fueled the outbreak. Here we evaluate the molecular characteristics of HIV-1 sequences (n = 290) from PWID in several Pakistani cities to examine transmission dynamics and the association between rates of HIV-1 transmission with regards to regional trends in opioid trafficking. Tip-to-tip (patristic) distance based phylogenetic cluster inferences and BEAST2 Bayesian phylodynamic analyses of time-stamped data were performed on HIV-1 pol sequences generated from dried blood spots collected from 1,453 PWID as part of a cross-sectional survey conducted in Pakistan during 2014/2015. Overall, subtype A1 strains were dominant (75.2%) followed by CRF02_AG (14.1%), recombinants/unassigned (7.2%), CRF35_AD (2.1%), G (1.0%) and C (0.3%). Nearly three quarters of the PWID HIV-1 sequences belonged to one of five distinct phylogenetic clusters. Just below half (44.4%) of individuals in the largest cluster (n = 118) did seek help injecting from professional injectors which was previously identified as a strong correlate of HIV-1 infection. Spikes in estimated HIV-1 effective population sizes coincided with increases in opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan, Pakistan’s western neighbor. Structured coalescent analysis was undertaken in order to investigate the spatial relationship of HIV-1 transmission among the various cities under study. In general terms, our analysis placed the city of Larkana at the center of the PWID HIV-1 epidemic in Pakistan which is consistent with previous epidemiological data. Public Library of Science 2020-08-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7454939/ /pubmed/32857765 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237560 Text en © 2020 Cholette et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cholette, François
Joy, Jeffrey
Pelcat, Yann
Thompson, Laura H.
Pilon, Richard
Ho, John
Capina, Rupert
Archibald, Chris
Blanchard, James F.
Emmanuel, Faran
Reza, Tahira
Dar, Nosheen
Harrigan, Richard
Kim, John
Sandstrom, Paul
HIV-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in Pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade
title HIV-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in Pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade
title_full HIV-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in Pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade
title_fullStr HIV-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in Pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade
title_full_unstemmed HIV-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in Pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade
title_short HIV-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in Pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade
title_sort hiv-1 phylodynamic analysis among people who inject drugs in pakistan correlates with trends in illicit opioid trade
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7454939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32857765
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237560
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