4.6 Article

The transmission of drug-resistant strains of HIV in heterosexual populations based on genetic sequences

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0259023

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Science item of China [11771277]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2017ZX10201101]

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The study suggests that in China, incorporating different intervention strategies (treatment rate reaching 90%, treatment success rate reaching 90%) can significantly reduce both the HIV infection rate and drug resistance rate.
Background China's National Free Antiretroviral Treatment Program (NFATP) has substantially reduced morbidity and HIV/AIDS incidence since 2003. However, HIV resistance to antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) has been a major challenge for the current treatment of HIV/AIDS in China. Methods In the current study, we established a nested dynamic model to predict the multi-drug resistance dynamics of HIV among the heterosexual population and evaluated the impact of intervention measures on the transmission of drug resistance. We obtained an effective reproductive number R-e(d) from each sub-model held at different stages of the dynamic model. Meanwhile, we applied Bayesian phylogenetic methods to infer the weighted average effective reproductive number R-e(g) from four HIV subtypes that sampled from 912 HIVpositive patients in China. It is an original and innovative method by fitting R-e(d) to R-e(g) by Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) to generate unknown parameters in R-e(d). Results By analyzing the HIV gene sequences, we inferred that the most recent common ancestor of CRF01AE, CRF07BC, CRF08BC, and CRFBC dated from 1994, 1990, 1993 and 1990, respectively. The weighted average effective reproductive number R-e(g) dropped from 1.95 in 1994 to 1.73 in 2018. Considering different interventions, we used a macro dynamic model to predict the trend of HIV resistance. The results show that the number of new infections and total drug resistance under the baseline parameter (S-1) are 253,422 and 213,250 in 2025, respectively. Comparing with the numbers under the target treatment rate (S-2), they were 219,717 and 236,890, respectively. However, under the ideal treatment target (S-3, the treatment rate reaches 90% and the treatment success rate reaches 90%), the number of new infections shows a declining trend and will decrease to 46,559 by 2025. Compared with S-1 and S-2, the total number of resistance also decreased to 160,899 in 2025. Conclusion With the promotion of NFATP in China, HIV resistance to ARVs is inevitable. The strategy of increasing the treatment rate would not only ineffectively curb the epidemic, but also deteriorate drug resistance issue. Whereas, a combination of intervention strategies (the treatment rate reaches 90% and the treatment success rate reaches 90%) can greatly reduce both infection and drug resistance rate than applying one strategy alone.

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