Genital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving HIV prevalence in Africa.

<h4>Background</h4>Extensive evidence from observational studies suggests a role for genital herpes in the HIV epidemic. A number of herpes vaccines are under development and several trials of the efficacy of HSV-2 treatment with acyclovir in reducing HIV acquisition, transmission, and d...

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Autores principales: Laith J Abu-Raddad, Amalia S Magaret, Connie Celum, Anna Wald, Ira M Longini, Steven G Self, Lawrence Corey
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Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:d81916ece6794fffac6d86baa15737802021-11-25T06:12:20ZGenital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving HIV prevalence in Africa.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0002230https://doaj.org/article/d81916ece6794fffac6d86baa15737802008-05-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18493617/pdf/?tool=EBIhttps://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203<h4>Background</h4>Extensive evidence from observational studies suggests a role for genital herpes in the HIV epidemic. A number of herpes vaccines are under development and several trials of the efficacy of HSV-2 treatment with acyclovir in reducing HIV acquisition, transmission, and disease progression have just reported their results or will report their results in the next year. The potential impact of these interventions requires a quantitative assessment of the magnitude of the synergy between HIV and HSV-2 at the population level.<h4>Methods and findings</h4>A deterministic compartmental model of HIV and HSV-2 dynamics and interactions was constructed. The nature of the epidemiologic synergy was explored qualitatively and quantitatively and compared to other sexually transmitted infections (STIs). The results suggest a more substantial role for HSV-2 in fueling HIV spread in sub-Saharan Africa than other STIs. We estimate that in settings of high HSV-2 prevalence, such as Kisumu, Kenya, more than a quarter of incident HIV infections may have been attributed directly to HSV-2. HSV-2 has also contributed considerably to the onward transmission of HIV by increasing the pool of HIV positive persons in the population and may explain one-third of the differential HIV prevalence among the cities of the Four City study. Conversely, we estimate that HIV had only a small net impact on HSV-2 prevalence.<h4>Conclusions</h4>HSV-2 role as a biological cofactor in HIV acquisition and transmission may have contributed substantially to HIV particularly by facilitating HIV spread among the low-risk population with stable long-term sexual partnerships. This finding suggests that prevention of HSV-2 infection through a prophylactic vaccine may be an effective intervention both in nascent epidemics with high HIV incidence in the high risk groups, and in established epidemics where a large portion of HIV transmission occurs in stable partnerships.Laith J Abu-RaddadAmalia S MagaretConnie CelumAnna WaldIra M LonginiSteven G SelfLawrence CoreyPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 3, Iss 5, p e2230 (2008)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Laith J Abu-Raddad
Amalia S Magaret
Connie Celum
Anna Wald
Ira M Longini
Steven G Self
Lawrence Corey
Genital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving HIV prevalence in Africa.
description <h4>Background</h4>Extensive evidence from observational studies suggests a role for genital herpes in the HIV epidemic. A number of herpes vaccines are under development and several trials of the efficacy of HSV-2 treatment with acyclovir in reducing HIV acquisition, transmission, and disease progression have just reported their results or will report their results in the next year. The potential impact of these interventions requires a quantitative assessment of the magnitude of the synergy between HIV and HSV-2 at the population level.<h4>Methods and findings</h4>A deterministic compartmental model of HIV and HSV-2 dynamics and interactions was constructed. The nature of the epidemiologic synergy was explored qualitatively and quantitatively and compared to other sexually transmitted infections (STIs). The results suggest a more substantial role for HSV-2 in fueling HIV spread in sub-Saharan Africa than other STIs. We estimate that in settings of high HSV-2 prevalence, such as Kisumu, Kenya, more than a quarter of incident HIV infections may have been attributed directly to HSV-2. HSV-2 has also contributed considerably to the onward transmission of HIV by increasing the pool of HIV positive persons in the population and may explain one-third of the differential HIV prevalence among the cities of the Four City study. Conversely, we estimate that HIV had only a small net impact on HSV-2 prevalence.<h4>Conclusions</h4>HSV-2 role as a biological cofactor in HIV acquisition and transmission may have contributed substantially to HIV particularly by facilitating HIV spread among the low-risk population with stable long-term sexual partnerships. This finding suggests that prevention of HSV-2 infection through a prophylactic vaccine may be an effective intervention both in nascent epidemics with high HIV incidence in the high risk groups, and in established epidemics where a large portion of HIV transmission occurs in stable partnerships.
format article
author Laith J Abu-Raddad
Amalia S Magaret
Connie Celum
Anna Wald
Ira M Longini
Steven G Self
Lawrence Corey
author_facet Laith J Abu-Raddad
Amalia S Magaret
Connie Celum
Anna Wald
Ira M Longini
Steven G Self
Lawrence Corey
author_sort Laith J Abu-Raddad
title Genital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving HIV prevalence in Africa.
title_short Genital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving HIV prevalence in Africa.
title_full Genital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving HIV prevalence in Africa.
title_fullStr Genital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving HIV prevalence in Africa.
title_full_unstemmed Genital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving HIV prevalence in Africa.
title_sort genital herpes has played a more important role than any other sexually transmitted infection in driving hiv prevalence in africa.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2008
url https://doaj.org/article/d81916ece6794fffac6d86baa1573780
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AT amaliasmagaret genitalherpeshasplayedamoreimportantrolethananyothersexuallytransmittedinfectionindrivinghivprevalenceinafrica
AT conniecelum genitalherpeshasplayedamoreimportantrolethananyothersexuallytransmittedinfectionindrivinghivprevalenceinafrica
AT annawald genitalherpeshasplayedamoreimportantrolethananyothersexuallytransmittedinfectionindrivinghivprevalenceinafrica
AT iramlongini genitalherpeshasplayedamoreimportantrolethananyothersexuallytransmittedinfectionindrivinghivprevalenceinafrica
AT stevengself genitalherpeshasplayedamoreimportantrolethananyothersexuallytransmittedinfectionindrivinghivprevalenceinafrica
AT lawrencecorey genitalherpeshasplayedamoreimportantrolethananyothersexuallytransmittedinfectionindrivinghivprevalenceinafrica
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