High HIV-1 diversity in immigrants resident in Italy (2008–2017)

Author:

Maggiorella Maria Teresa, ,Sanarico Nunzia,Brindicci Gaetano,Monno Laura,Santoro Carmen Rita,Coppola Nicola,Cuomo Nunzia,Azzurri Annalisa,Cesario Francesco,Luciani Filippo,El-Hamad Issa,D’Ettorre Gabriella,Turriziani Ombretta,Mazzuti Laura,Poggi Alessandra,Vichi Francesca,Mariabelli Elisa,Surace Lorenzo,Berardelli Giuseppina,Picconi Orietta,Cenci Alessandra,Sernicola Leonardo,Rovetto Claudia,Fulgenzi Domenico,Belli Roberto,Salvi Emanuela,Zeo Patrizia Di,Borsetti Alessandra,Ridolfi Barbara,Losappio Ruggero,Zoboli Fabio,Schietroma Ivan,Cella Eleonora,Angeletti Silvia,Ciccozzi Massimo,D’Amato Stefania,Ensoli Barbara,Buttò Stefano

Abstract

AbstractThe proportion of new diagnoses of HIV infection in immigrants residing in Italy raised from 11% in 1992 to 29.7% in 2018. To investigate the HIV clades circulating in this community a retrospective study was performed in 557 HIV-infected immigrants living in 12 Italian cities. Immigrants originated from East-Europe and Central-Asia (11.7%), North Africa and Middle East (7.3%), South and South-East Asia (7.2%), Latin America and the Caribbean (14.4%), and sub-Saharan Africa (59.4%). More than 87% of immigrants were on antiretroviral therapy (ART), although 26.6% of them were viremic. A 22.0% of immigrants had hepatitis (HBV and/or HCV) and/or tuberculosis. HIV phylogenetic analysis on sequences from 192 immigrants showed the presence of clades B (23.4%), G (16.1%), C (10.4%), A1 (9.4%), F1 (5.2%), D (1.6%) and Circulating Recombinant Forms (CRFs) (33.9%). CRF02_AG represented 72.3% of the total CRFs. Clusters between immigrants and Italian natives were also present. Drug resistance mutations to NRTI, NNRTI, and PI drug classes occurred in 29.1% of ART-treated and in 12.9% of ART-naïve individuals. These data highlight the need for tailored public health interventions in immigrants to avoid spreading in Italy of HIV genetic forms and ART-resistant variants, as well as HIV co-morbidities.

Funder

Gilead Fellowship Program

Italian Ministry of Interior

Italian Ministry of Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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