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P205 HIV non-b subtypes in san francisco: migration but little local transmission

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Background Several HIV non-B subtypes and recombinants have been documented at low frequencies in the US. We characterized the viral diversity, epidemiology, and extent of local transmission and migration of… Click to show full abstract

Background Several HIV non-B subtypes and recombinants have been documented at low frequencies in the US. We characterized the viral diversity, epidemiology, and extent of local transmission and migration of non-B subtypes in San Francisco. Methods Viral sequences from patients in care at local public and private health providers (2000–2016) were matched to the San Francisco Department of Public Health HIV/AIDS case registry. Phylogenies were reconstructed for the pol region of subtypes A1, C, D, G, CRF01_AE, CRF02_AG, and CRF07_BC sequences, with reference sequences from the LANL HIV database. Local transmission and global migration frequencies were compared based on phylogenetic topology. Epidemiologic associations between non-B subtypes and patient characteristics were assessed by multivariate logistic regression. Results Of the 11,382 viral sequences subtyped, 10,669 were matched to 7,236 registry cases. Fourteen non-B subtypes and CRFs were observed. Among registry cases, 141 (2%) had non-B subtypes or CRFs, and 72 (1%) had unnamed recombinant forms. The proportion of non-B subtypes increased over time. Of the 146 non-B transmission linkages identified, 104 (71%) appeared to represent migration from outside the study dataset, of which 86 (83%) had no close linkage to US reference strains. Twenty-six cases (18%) appeared to be local transmission, clustering with other sequences in this analysis. Of the 77 registry cases born outside of North America, 54 (70%) were phylogenetically linked to the case’s region of birth. Cases with non-B subtypes or CRFs were associated with Asian/Pacific-Islander race/ethnicity (aOR=3.17; p<0.001), non-US birth country (aOR=11.02; p<0.001) and HIV diagnosis after 2009 (aOR=4.81; p<0.001). Conclusion Non-B subtypes were present at low but increasing frequency in San Francisco. Local transmission of non-B subtypes appeared to be limited, as most non-B infections were likely acquired outside the US. Knowledge of subtype diversity can provide a better understanding of HIV global migration patterns, and inform treatment and prevention efforts. Disclosure No significant relationships.

Keywords: local transmission; non subtypes; transmission; migration; san francisco

Journal Title: Sexually Transmitted Infections
Year Published: 2019

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