Istock (Model(s) used for illustrative purposes only) |
A look at a group of 13- to 24-year-olds on
antiretrovirals found one in six episodically had a significant viral
load and an STI.
July 31, 2017
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Adolescents and young adults on antiretroviral (ARV) treatment for
HIV may episodically develop a significant risk of transmitting the
virus. Not only are they less likely to maintain a fully suppressed
viral load than older people with HIV, but they are also more likely to
contract sexually transmitted infections (STIs), which raise their risk
of transmitting HIV to others.
To assess such long-term
risk, researchers conducted a retrospective cohort study of individuals
between 13 and 24 years old receiving ARV treatment at the adolescent
HIV clinic at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia between 2002 and
2015. Sarah M. Wood, MD, of Children’s Hospital and the University of
Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, presented findings from the
study at the 9th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Science in
Paris (IAS 2017).
For their analysis, the
investigators included all study visits after the participants started
ARVs at which a viral load test result was registered. They categorized
the participants as being at high risk for transmitting the virus to
others if at that time they had a viral load greater than 1,500 and were
diagnosed with gonorrhea, chlamydia or syphilis. Pairing these two
factors made for a more conservative model than looking at just viral
load, meaning the researchers results likely underestimate young
people’s long-term risk of transmitting HIV while on treatment for the
virus.
A total of 240 participants were followed for a
median 3.2 years, providing data from 2,661 study visits. Eighty-seven
percent (209) were African-American, 73 percent (173) were male, 7
percent (17) were transgender females and 49 percent (117) had a history
of STI diagnosis prior to entering care at the clinic or were diagnosed
with an STI upon entry into care.
Seventy-three
percent (176) of the participants had some form of transmission risk
during the study, including: 21 percent who only had a viral load above
1,500; 27 percent (64) who were diagnosed with only an STI; 8 percent
(19) who had a viral load above that threshold and received an STI
diagnosis but not at the same time; and 17 percent (4) who were at high
risk of transmission because they had a viral load above the threshold
and had an STI at the same time.
Fifty-nine percent of
the participants had public insurance, 18 percent had private insurance,
7 percent received Ryan White CARE Act funding and 16 percent were
uninsured.
After adjusting the data for various
factors, the researchers found that being diagnosed with an STI upon
entering HIV care or having a history of prior STI diagnosis was
associated with a 3.09-fold increased risk of later entering a period of
high risk of transmitting HIV.
The study authors
concluded that their findings emphasized the need for interventions that
encourage better adherence to ARVs as well as STI risk reduction among
HIV-positive young people.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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