Epidemiological and viral characteristics of undiagnosed HIV infections in Botswana

Author:

Bhebhe Lynnette,Moyo Sikhulile,Gaseitsiwe Simani,Pretorius-Holme Molly,Yankinda Etienne K.,Manyake Kutlo,Kgathi Coulson,Mmalane Mompati,Lebelonyane Refeletswe,Gaolathe Tendani,Bachanas Pamela,Ussery Faith,Letebele Mpho,Makhema Joseph,Wirth Kathleen E.,Lockman Shahin,Essex Max,Novitsky Vlad,Ragonnet-Cronin Manon

Abstract

Abstract Background HIV-1 is endemic in Botswana. The country’s primary challenge is identifying people living with HIV who are unaware of their status. We evaluated factors associated with undiagnosed HIV infection using HIV-1 phylogenetic, behavioural, and demographic data. Methods As part of the Botswana Combination Prevention Project, 20% of households in 30 villages were tested for HIV and followed from 2013 to 2018. A total of 12,610 participants were enrolled, 3596 tested HIV-positive at enrolment, and 147 participants acquired HIV during the trial. Extensive socio-demographic and behavioural data were collected from participants and next-generation sequences were generated for HIV-positive cases. We compared three groups of participants: (1) those previously known to be HIV-positive at enrolment (n = 2995); (2) those newly diagnosed at enrolment (n = 601) and (3) those who tested HIV-negative at enrolment but tested HIV-positive during follow-up (n = 147). We searched for differences in demographic and behavioural factors between known and newly diagnosed group using logistic regression. We also compared the topology of each group in HIV-1 phylogenies and used a genetic diversity-based algorithm to classify infections as recent (< 1 year) or chronic (≥ 1 year). Results Being male (aOR = 2.23) and younger than 35 years old (aOR = 8.08) was associated with undiagnosed HIV infection (p < 0.001), as was inconsistent condom use (aOR = 1.76). Women were more likely to have undiagnosed infections if they were married, educated, and tested frequently. For men, being divorced increased their risk. The genetic diversity-based algorithm classified most incident infections as recent (75.0%), but almost none of known infections (2.0%). The estimated proportion of recent infections among new diagnoses was 37.0% (p < 0.001). Conclusion Our results indicate that those with undiagnosed infections are likely to be young men and women who do not use condoms consistently. Among women, several factors were predictive: being married, educated, and testing frequently increased risk. Men at risk were more difficult to delineate. A sizeable proportion of undiagnosed infections were recent based on a genetic diversity-based classifier. In the era of “test and treat all”, pre-exposure prophylaxis may be prioritized towards individuals who self-identify or who can be identified using these predictors in order to halt onward transmission in time.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

DELTAS Africa Initiative

Wellcome Trust

Fogarty International Center

National Institute of Health

U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief

Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

Medical Research Council

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases

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