4.7 Article

A New Strategy to Quantitatively Identify Hot-Spot Areas in Growth of New HIV Infections for Targeted Interventions

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.680867

Keywords

recent HIV infection; geospatial analysis; geographic distribution; quantitative study; HIV/AIDS

Funding

  1. China National Science and Technology Major Projects in Infectious Disease from Ministry of Science and Technology [2018ZX10301102-003, 2018ZX10734404-005, 2017ZX10201101-002-003]
  2. Science and Technology Program of Beijing, China [D171100006717001]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71974199]
  4. National Center for AIDS/STD Controland Prevention

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This study compared the geographic distribution of recent and long-term HIV infection cases using data from a whole-population physical examination in four key counties in China. The results showed that some areas had more recently infected HIV cases. Quantitative analysis revealed twenty-three townships with an increase in the number of recent infections, which can be used to accurately identify hot-spot areas for targeted interventions.
Background: Previous geographic studies of HIV infection have usually used prevalence data, which cannot indicate the hot-spot areas of current transmission. To develop quantitative analytic measures for accurately identifying hot-spot areas in growth of new HIV infection, we investigated the geographic distribution features of recent HIV infection and long-term HIV infection using data from a whole-population physical examination in four key counties in Liangshan prefecture, which are most severely affected by HIV in China. Methods: Through a whole-population physical examination during November 2017- June 2018 in the four key counties, a total of 5,555 HIV cases were diagnosed and 246 cases were classified as recently infected by laboratory HIV recency tests. The geospatial patterns of recent and long-term HIV infected cases were compared using ordinary least squares regression and Geodetector. Further, geospatial-heterogeneity was quantified and indicated using a residual map to visualize hot-spot areas where new infection is increasing. Results: The geographic location of HIV cases showed an uneven distribution along major roads and clustered at road intersections. The geographic mapping showed that several areas were clustered with more recently infected HIV cases than long-term infected cases. The quantitative analyses showed that the geospatial asymmetry between recent and long-term HIV infection was 0.30 and 0.31 in ordinary least squares regression and Geodetector analysis, respectively. The quantitative analyses found twenty-three townships showing an increase in the number of recent infections. Conclusions: Quantitative analysis of geospatial-heterogeneous areas by comparing between recent and long-term HIV infections allows accurate identification of hot-spot areas where new infections are expanding, which can be used as a potent methodological tool to guide targeted interventions and curb the spread of the epidemic.

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