Prevention and Control Are Not a Regional Matter: A Spatial Correlation and Molecular Linkage Analysis Based on Newly Reported HIV/AIDS Patients in 2021 in Jiangsu, China

Author:

Yuan Defu1,Liu Shanshan1,Ouyang Fei1,Ai Wei2,Shi Lingen3,Liu Xiaoyan3,Qiu Tao3,Zhou Ying3,Wang Bei1

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Environmental Medicine Engineering of Ministry of Education, Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, School of Public Health, Southeast University, Nanjing 210009, China

2. School of Public Health, Nanjing Medical University, Nanjing 211166, China

3. Department of HIV/STD Control and Prevention, Jiangsu Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Nanjing 210009, China

Abstract

HIV-related spatial analysis studies in China are relatively few, and Jiangsu Province has not reported the relevant data in recent years. To describe the spatial distribution and molecular linkage characteristics of HIV-infected patients, this article combined descriptive epidemiology, spatial analysis, and molecular epidemiology methods to analyze patient reporting, patient mobility information, and HIV sequence information simultaneously. The results showed that HIV reporting profiles differed among Jiangsu cities, with the reporting rate in southern Jiangsu being above average. There was a spatial autocorrelation (Global Moran I = 0.5426, p < 0.05), with Chang Zhou showing a High–High aggregation pattern. Chang Zhou and Wu Xi were identified as hotspots for HIV reporting and access to molecular transmission networks. Some infected individuals still showed cross-city or even cross-province mobility after diagnosis, and three were linked with individuals in the destination cities within the largest molecular transmission cluster, involving 196 patients. The cross-city or cross-province mobility of patients may result in a potential HIV transmission risk, suggesting that combining timely social network surveys, building an extensive transmission network across cities and provinces, and taking critical regions and key populations as entry points could contribute to improved prevention and control efficiency and promote achievement of the 95-95-95 target and cascade.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

Reference27 articles.

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2. UNAIDS (2023, September 26). 2023 Unaids Global Aids Update—The Path that Ends Aids. Available online: https://thepath.unaids.org/wp-content/themes/unaids2023/assets/files/2023_report.pdf.

3. Trends in the epidemiology of sexually transmitted disease, acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), gonorrhea, and syphilis, in the 31 provinces of mainland China;Ye;Med. Sci. Monit.,2019

4. Jiangsu-Commission-of-Health (2023, September 26). The Province’s AIDS Prevention and Treatment Progress in 2022, Available online: http://wjw.jiangsu.gov.cn/art/2022/11/30/art_7312_10693312.html.

5. Jiangsu-Commission-of-Health (2023, September 26). The Province’s AIDS Prevention and Treatment Progress in 2021, Available online: http://wjw.jiangsu.gov.cn/art/2021/11/30/art_7312_10137196.html.

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