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A Population-Structured HIV Epidemic in Israel: Roles of Risk and Ethnicity
Authors:Zehava Grossman  Boaz Avidor  Zohar Mor  Michal Chowers  Itzchak Levy  Eduardo Shahar  Klaris Riesenberg  Zev Sthoeger  Shlomo Maayan  Wei Shao  Margalit Lorber  Karen Olstein-Pops  Daniel Elbirt  Hila Elinav  Ilan Asher  Diana Averbuch  Valery Istomin  Bat Sheva Gottesman  Eynat Kedem  Shirley Girshengorn  Zipi Kra-Oz  Yonat Shemer Avni  Sara Radian Sade  Dan Turner  Frank Maldarelli
Abstract:

Background

HIV in Israel started with a subtype-B epidemic among men who have sex with men, followed in the 1980s and 1990s by introductions of subtype C from Ethiopia (predominantly acquired by heterosexual transmission) and subtype A from the former Soviet Union (FSU, most often acquired by intravenous drug use). The epidemic matured over the last 15 years without additional large influx of exogenous infections. Between 2005 and 2013 the number of infected men who have sex with men (MSM) increased 2.9-fold, compared to 1.6-fold and 1.3-fold for intravenous drug users (IVDU) and Ethiopian-origin residents. Understanding contemporary spread is essential for effective public health planning.

Methods

We analyzed demographic and virologic data from 1,427 HIV-infected individuals diagnosed with HIV-I during 1998–2012. HIV phylogenies were reconstructed with maximum-likelihood and Bayesian methods.

Results

Subtype-B viruses, but not A or C, demonstrated a striking number of large clusters with common ancestors having posterior probability ≥0.95, including some suggesting presence of transmission networks. Transmitted drug resistance was highest in subtype B (13%). MSM represented a frequent risk factor in cross-ethnic transmission, demonstrated by the presence of Israeli-born with non-B virus infections and FSU immigrants with non-A subtypes.

Conclusions

Reconstructed phylogenetic trees demonstrated substantial grouping in subtype B, but not in non-MSM subtype-A or in subtype-C, reflecting differences in transmission dynamics linked to HIV transmission categories. Cross-ethnic spread occurred through multiple independent introductions, with MSM playing a prevalent role in the transmission of the virus. Such data provide a baseline to track epidemic trends and will be useful in informing and quantifying efforts to reduce HIV transmission.
Keywords:
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