Online Program

327023
Finding the recently-infected to enhance medical care and prevention of transmission: A network approach and study in Athens, Greece


Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Samuel R. Friedman, National Development and Research Institutes, New York, NY
Leslie Williams, National Development and Research Institutes, New York, NY
Stephen Muth, Quintus-ential Solutions, Colorado Springs, CO
Angelos Hatzakis, Department of Hygiene Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
Dimitrios Paraskevis, Department of Hygiene Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
Eirini Pavlitina, Transmission Reduction Intervention Project
John Schneider, MD, MPH, Departments of Public Health Sciences & Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
Georgios Nikolopoulos, University of Cyprus, Medical School, Nicosia, Cyprus
Background: Case finding and treatment as prevention should find additional recently-HIV-infected people. Implications for prevention remain unclear.

Methods: HIV+ “seeds” were referred from an Athenian study of people who inject drugs (PWID). Participants were considered recently infected if they had documented HIV negativity within the prior 6 months or if HIV-1 Limiting Antigen Avidity EIA (LAg) ODn ≤ 1.5 with no evidence of either late-stage infection or antiretroviral treatment. Other HIV+ participants were classified chronically infected. Seeds were interviewed to elicit and recruit network members who injected drugs or had sex with either seeds or others attending the same social spaces. Statistics use Poisson distribution for yield rates and binomial distribution for proportions.

Results: 162 people were recruited from 23 recently-infected seeds’ networks and social spaces (N&SS); 64 from N&SS of 18 chronically infected seeds. We located 11 recently-infected people in recently-infected seeds’ N&SS; yield rate and proportions were 0.478 (95% CI 0.239, 0.856) per seed and 0.068 (CI 0.034, 0.118) per N&SS member respectively. One recently-infected person was found in N&SS of chronically infected seeds: 0.056/seed (CI 0.001, 0.310) and 0.016/N&SS member (CI 0.001, 0.084). Rate and odds ratios in recents’ N&SS to chronically infecteds’ N&SS were 8.61 (p=0.039) and 4.58 (p=0.114), respectively.

Conclusions: Tracing N&SS of recently-infected PWID locates recently-infected people more efficiently than tracing N&SS of longer-term infected or, by extension, of all HIV-positives. The higher density of recently-infected in N&SS of recently-infected supports the hypothesis that the recently-infected account for an enhanced proportion of new infections.

Learning Areas:

Epidemiology
Program planning
Protection of the public in relation to communicable diseases including prevention or control
Provision of health care to the public
Public health or related research
Social and behavioral sciences

Learning Objectives:
Describe an effective social network intervention for TasP and case finding Explain the evidence for its effectiveness Design similar interventions

Keyword(s): HIV/AIDS, Surveillance

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I have been studying HIV/AIDS since 1983 and am Principal Investigator of this Avant Garde Award project. I have a PhD.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.