9 research outputs found

    HIV/AIDS, Security and Conflict: New Realities, New Responses

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    Ten years after the HIV/AIDS epidemic itself was identified as a threat to international peace and security, findings from the three-year AIDS, Security and Conflict Initiative (ASCI)(1) present evidence of the mutually reinforcing dynamics linking HIV/AIDS, conflict and security

    Impact of pneumococcal vaccination in Senegalese HIV-1-infected children

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    SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    V3 serotyping of HIV-1 infection : correlation with genotyping and limitations

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    HIV-1 V3 serotyping is a classification of immunodeficiency viruses based on antibody binding to V3 peptides that allows obtaining information on circulating subtypes that could be important for population-based epidemiologic studies. Recently, several laboratories have developed V3 enzyme-immunoassays (EIAs) using V3 peptides of subtypes A to E. In the present study, the utility of including additional peptides of subtypes F to H to the EIA was evaluated on a panel of 203 well-characterized serum samples from patents with diverse geographic origins (22 countires) and known HIV-1 genotype (79 A, 61 B, 21 C, 7 D, 7 E, 21 F, 6 G, 1 H). The results indicate a high predictive value (ppv) for serotypes B (greater than or equal to 0.86), D (1) and E (0.88), and confirm the difficulty of predicting genotype A or C based on serotype A or C. Results also indicate that inclusion of the F peptide in the V3 EIAs may be useful (ppv = 0.61), but introduction of peptides G and H failed to demonstrate significant sensitivity or specificity for these subtypes. Correlation between serotyping and amino-acid sequences of the V3 region from 103 samples allowed the identification of key amino-acids that appear essential for subtype-specific seroreactivity. (Résumé d'auteur

    Mobility and the spread of human immunodeficiency virus into rural areas of West Africa.

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    BACKGROUND: In eastern and southern Africa, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic appeared first in urban centres and then spread to rural areas. Its overall prevalence is lower in West Africa, with the highest levels still found in cities. Rural areas are also threatened, however, because of the population's high mobility. We conducted a study in three different communities with contrasting infection levels to understand the epidemiology of HIV infection in rural West Africa. METHOD: A comparative cross-sectional study using a standardized questionnaire and biological tests was conducted among samples in two rural communities of Senegal (Niakhar and Bandafassi, 866 and 952 adults, respectively) and a rural community of Guinea-Bissau (Caio, 1416 adults). We compared the distribution of population characteristics and analysed risk factors for HIV infection in Caio at the individual level. RESULTS: The level of HIV infection was very low in Niakhar (0.3%) and Bandafassi (0.0%), but 10.5% of the adults in Caio were infected, mostly with HIV type 2 (HIV-2). Mobility was very prevalent in all sites. Short-term mobility was found to be a risk factor for HIV infection among men in Caio (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 2.06; 95% CI: 1.06-3.99). Women from Caio who reported casual sex in a city during the past 12 months were much more likely to be infected with HIV (aOR = 5.61 95% CI: 1.56-20.15). Short-term mobility was associated with risk behaviours at all sites. CONCLUSIONS: Mobility appears to be a key factor for HIV spread in rural areas of West Africa, because population movement enables the virus to disseminate and also because of the particularly risky behaviours of those who are mobile. More prevention efforts should be directed at migrants from rural areas who travel to cities with substantial levels of HIV infection
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