(CNN) In the 1980s, HIV took the world by surprise.
The
infection feigned a role as new and unknown but had established itself
as a pandemic in other parts of the world, without anyone realizing.Though the roots of the virus were soon discovered to lie in Africa, where a range of subtypes
exist, one in particular -- subtype B -- was spreading rapidly around
the globe, particularly in the West, and just how it spread was largely
unknown -- until now.
Scientists at
the University of Oxford recently solved part of this mystery by
analyzing thousands of genome sequences from viruses isolated in
different parts of the world. Their study revealed North America to play
an influential role in the pandemic and Europe to have been influenced,
with the virus arriving in droves from other regions.
"Europe was absorbing the virus," said Gkikas Magiorkinis, a medical virologist at the University of Oxford who led the study. "North America was actively letting the virus out."
Creating a flow
North
America was seen to be spreading the virus much more than importing it
by transmitting it out of the continent and into Western Europe on
multiple occasions.
"It wasn't just
a random transition or single point of introduction; it was happening
constantly," Magiorkinis said. He stressed that these are movements of
the virus, not migrants. "It's not immigrants causing this, as people
going on holiday can get infected."
This
continuous flow is, in part, thought to be due to certain countries
being more influential than others, such as those in North America. A
country is considered influential by having many connections to other
parts of the world, as once any virus enters, it can then easily spread.
"It was only when it entered the USA that it became a pandemic," Magiorkinis said.
Internal travel
In contrast, Europe was found to have absorbed constant flows of the virus from multiple regions of the world, including the United States.
"Within
Europe, three countries had higher connections: the UK, France and
Switzerland," Magiorkinis said. These connections saw these countries
both releasing and absorbing the virus, but with greater numbers coming
in, including from the United States.
"The critical issue is population-mixing and the fact people acquire, or spread, viruses associated with travel," said Chris Beyrer,
professor of public health and human rights at the Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health. "There's a long history of blame for
the spread of the epidemic ... but you have to improve control and
treatment."
Multiple studies have
shown the benefits of antiretroviral treatment in preventing
transmission of HIV as levels of the virus can become undetectable once
on treatment.
After
arriving in Europe, the virus soon spread within the continent but with
a clear segregation between Eastern and Western Europe as each side
evolved its own pockets of the epidemic. In Western Europe (as well as
North America), HIV mainly affects gay communities, causing concentrated
epidemics. In the UK, more than half of new HIV infections
occurred among gay men in 2014, despite them making up an estimated 2%
to 3% of the male population. But in Eastern Europe, the virus mainly
infects injecting drug users, and transmission dynamics are quite
different, as the virus is not spread sexually.
This
segregation of epidemics occurred until the collapse of the Soviet
Union in the 1990s, when movement -- and transmission --promptly
changed.
"When the Soviet Union
fell, we can see the virus in that area spilled over into Western
Europe, probably due to migration," Magiorkinis said
What it means
The
study was hypothetical and based on genetic analysis, so they cannot be
proved. Beyrer also stresses that the Oxford team's findings have their
limitations: "It's a huge pandemic, and huge numbers are not provided
in these samples. You couldn't infer much about the rest of the world
from this study."
But
the burden in Eastern Europe today has public health teams concerned,
as this is one of only two regions in the world today where numbers
infected with HIV are rising, and any insight into transmission can be
used to better target resources.
"The future of HIV transmission in Europe is the East," Beyrer said.
The
study also reveals the ease with which HIV and other viruses can spread
across the world, calling for more global solutions to the problem.
"Public
health responses to HIV must be thought of as a global response,
because you cannot stop movement between countries," Magiorkinis said.
"It's crucial to build health systems that provide access to treatment
faster and reduce transmission."
http://edition.cnn.com/2016/07/07/health/global-spread-of-hiv/index.html
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