TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular dating and viral load growth rates suggested that the eclipse phase lasted about a week in HIV-1 infected adults in East Africa and Thailand
AU - the RV217 Study Team
AU - Rolland, Morgane
AU - Tovanabutra, Sodsai
AU - Dearlove, Bethany
AU - Li, Yifan
AU - Owen, Christopher L.
AU - Lewitus, Eric
AU - Sanders-Buell, Eric
AU - Bose, Meera
AU - O’Sullivan, Anne Marie
AU - Rossenkhan, Raabya
AU - Labuschagne, Jan Phillipus Lourens
AU - Edlefsen, Paul T.
AU - Reeves, Daniel B.
AU - Kijak, Gustavo
AU - Miller, Shana
AU - Poltavee, Kultida
AU - Lee, Jenica
AU - Bonar, Lydia
AU - Harbolick, Elizabeth
AU - Ahani, Bahar
AU - Pham, Phuc
AU - Kibuuka, Hannah
AU - Maganga, Lucas
AU - Nitayaphan, Sorachai
AU - Sawe, Fred K.
AU - Eller, Leigh Anne
AU - Gramzinski, Robert
AU - Kim, Jerome H.
AU - Michael, Nelson L.
AU - Robb, Merlin L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright: This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication.
PY - 2020/2
Y1 - 2020/2
N2 - Most HIV-1 infected individuals do not know their infection dates. Precise infection timing is crucial information for studies that document transmission networks or drug levels at infection. To improve infection timing, we used the prospective RV217 cohort where the window when plasma viremia becomes detectable is narrow: the last negative visit occurred a median of four days before the first detectable HIV-1 viremia with an RNA test, referred below as diagnosis. We sequenced 1,280 HIV-1 genomes from 39 participants at a median of 4, 32 and 170 days post-diagnosis. HIV-1 infections were dated by using sequence-based methods and a viral load regression method. Bayesian coalescent and viral load regression estimated that infections occurred a median of 6 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 9–3 and 11–4 days prior, respectively). Poisson-Fitter, which analyzes the distribution of hamming distances among sequences, estimated a median of 7 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 15–4 days) based on sequences sampled 4 days post-diagnosis, but it did not yield plausible results using sequences sampled at 32 days. Fourteen participants reported a high-risk exposure event at a median of 8 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 12 to 6 days prior). These different methods concurred that HIV-1 infection occurred about a week before detectable viremia, corresponding to 20 days (IQR: 34–15 days) before peak viral load. Together, our methods comparison helps define a framework for future dating studies in early HIV-1 infection.
AB - Most HIV-1 infected individuals do not know their infection dates. Precise infection timing is crucial information for studies that document transmission networks or drug levels at infection. To improve infection timing, we used the prospective RV217 cohort where the window when plasma viremia becomes detectable is narrow: the last negative visit occurred a median of four days before the first detectable HIV-1 viremia with an RNA test, referred below as diagnosis. We sequenced 1,280 HIV-1 genomes from 39 participants at a median of 4, 32 and 170 days post-diagnosis. HIV-1 infections were dated by using sequence-based methods and a viral load regression method. Bayesian coalescent and viral load regression estimated that infections occurred a median of 6 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 9–3 and 11–4 days prior, respectively). Poisson-Fitter, which analyzes the distribution of hamming distances among sequences, estimated a median of 7 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 15–4 days) based on sequences sampled 4 days post-diagnosis, but it did not yield plausible results using sequences sampled at 32 days. Fourteen participants reported a high-risk exposure event at a median of 8 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 12 to 6 days prior). These different methods concurred that HIV-1 infection occurred about a week before detectable viremia, corresponding to 20 days (IQR: 34–15 days) before peak viral load. Together, our methods comparison helps define a framework for future dating studies in early HIV-1 infection.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85079082189&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.ppat.1008179
DO - 10.1371/journal.ppat.1008179
M3 - Article
C2 - 32027734
AN - SCOPUS:85079082189
SN - 1553-7366
VL - 16
JO - PLoS Pathogens
JF - PLoS Pathogens
IS - 2
M1 - e1008179
ER -