Open Access
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Viruses, volume 14, issue 10, pages 2099

Molecular Epidemiology of HIV-1 in Eastern Europe and Russia

Maarten A A Van De Klundert 1
Anastasiia Antonova 2
Giulia Di Teodoro 3, 4
Rafael Ceña Diez 1
Nikoloz Chkhartishvili 5
Eva Heger 6
Anna Kuznetsova 2
Aleksey Lebedev 2
Aswathy Narayanan 1
Ekaterina Ozhmegova 2
Alexander Pronin 7
Andrey Shemshura 8
Alexandr Tumanov 2
Nico Pfeifer 9
ROLF KAISER 6
Francesco Saladini 10
Maurizio Zazzi 10
Francesca Incardona 3, 11
Marina Bobkova 2
Anders Sönnerborg 1, 12
Show full list: 20 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-09-22
Journal: Viruses
scimago Q1
SJR1.140
CiteScore7.3
Impact factor3.8
ISSN19994915
PubMed ID:  36298654
Infectious Diseases
Virology
Abstract

The HIV epidemic in Eastern Europe and Russia is large and not well-controlled. To describe the more recent molecular epidemiology of HIV-1, transmitted drug resistance, and the relationship between the epidemics in this region, we sequenced the protease and reverse transcriptase genes of HIV-1 from 812 people living with HIV from Ukraine (n = 191), Georgia (n = 201), and Russia (n = 420) before the initiation of antiretroviral therapy. In 190 Ukrainian patients, the integrase gene sequence was also determined. The most reported route of transmission was heterosexual contact, followed by intravenous drug use, and men having sex with men (MSM). Several pre-existing drug resistance mutations were found against non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (RTIs) (n = 103), protease inhibitors (n = 11), and nucleoside analogue RTIs (n = 12), mostly polymorphic mutations or revertants. In the integrase gene, four strains with accessory integrase strand transfer inhibitor mutations were identified. Sub-subtype A6 caused most of the infections (713/812; 87.8%) in all three countries, including in MSM. In contrast to earlier studies, no clear clusters related to the route of transmission were identified, indicating that, within the region, the exchange of viruses among the different risk groups may occur more often than earlier reported.

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