Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, California, USA.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2021 Oct;37(10):784-792. doi: 10.1089/AID.2020.0145. Epub 2021 Feb 8.
An important component underlying the disparity in HIV risk between race/ethnic groups is the preferential transmission between individuals in the same group. We sought to quantify transmission between different race/ethnicity groups and measure racial assortativity in HIV transmission networks in major metropolitan areas in the United States. We reconstructed HIV molecular transmission networks from viral sequences collected as part of HIV surveillance in New York City, Los Angeles County, and Cook County, Illinois. We calculated assortativity (the tendency for individuals to link to others with similar characteristics) across the network for three candidate characteristics: transmission risk, age at diagnosis, and race/ethnicity. We then compared assortativity between race/ethnicity groups. Finally, for each race/ethnicity pair, we performed network permutations to test whether the number of links observed differed from that expected if individuals were sorting at random. Transmission networks in all three jurisdictions were more assortative by race/ethnicity than by transmission risk or age at diagnosis. Despite the different race/ethnicity proportions in each metropolitan area and lower proportions of clustering among African Americans than other race/ethnicities, African Americans were the group most likely to have transmission partners of the same race/ethnicity. This high level of assortativity should be considered in the design of HIV intervention and prevention strategies.
不同种族/族裔群体之间 HIV 风险差异的一个重要因素是同一群体内个体之间的优先传播。我们试图量化不同种族/族裔群体之间的传播,并衡量美国主要大都市地区 HIV 传播网络中的种族聚类。我们从作为纽约市、洛杉矶县和伊利诺伊州库克县 HIV 监测一部分收集的病毒序列中重建了 HIV 分子传播网络。我们计算了网络中三个候选特征(传播风险、诊断时的年龄和种族/族裔)的聚类程度(个体与具有相似特征的其他人建立联系的趋势)。然后,我们比较了种族/族裔群体之间的聚类程度。最后,对于每个种族/族裔对,我们进行了网络置换,以检验观察到的连接数量是否与如果个体随机排序时的预期数量不同。所有三个司法管辖区的传播网络在种族/族裔方面比在传播风险或诊断时的年龄方面更具聚类性。尽管每个大都市地区的种族/族裔比例不同,并且非裔美国人之间的聚类比例低于其他种族/族裔,但非裔美国人最有可能有相同种族/族裔的传播伙伴。在设计 HIV 干预和预防策略时,应考虑这种高度的聚类性。