Half or more of HIV transmission events may occur within the period of high infectivity (and often high risk behavior) that can last 11 months or more after a person is initially infected. Unfortunately, neither test-and-treat intervention methods nor Acute HIV Infection projects have found effective ways to intervene against transmission during this risky recent infection period. We seek to develop effective intervention techniques against HIV transmission among drug users and their community members during the recent infection period using a combination of drug injection-, sexual- and social-network-based contact tracing methods; community alerts in the networks and venues of recent infectees; and the logic of going up and down infection chains.
Our first Aim i s to develop and evaluate ways to locate seeds, defined as drug users and other people who have recently been infected.
Our second Aim targets members of seeds' networks and people who attend their venues. We will test them for acute and for recent infection, and alert them to the probability that their networks contain highly-infectious members so they should reduce their risk and transmission behaviors for the next several months to minimize their chances of getting infected. This may also reduce transmission by untested people with recent infection. Community, network and venue education about the need and value of supporting those with recent infection should reduce stigma.
Our third Aim i s to reduce HIV transmission and to develop new ways to evaluate prevention for positives generally as well as our own success in reducing transmission. We will do this using a combination of follow- up interviews and testing, including of viral loads; phylogenetic techniques; and discrete event simulation modeling to assess our effectiveness.

Public Health Relevance

This project will attempt to develop an effective intervention to prevent HIV transmission by ?recently infected? highly-infectious drug users and others during their first months of infection?which may account for 50% or more of all transmission events in some localities. The intervention will use up-to-date testing technologies and network tracing and intervention techniques to shorten infection chains and reduce HIV transmission rates. It will be tested in localities with new HIV epidemics and also among drug-using African American men who have sex with men, a group with high HIV incidence rates over the last decade or more.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
NIH Director’s Pioneer Award (NDPA) (DP1)
Project #
4DP1DA034989-05
Application #
9102019
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDA1)
Program Officer
Lambert, Elizabeth
Project Start
2012-08-01
Project End
2017-07-31
Budget Start
2016-08-01
Budget End
2017-07-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
National Development & Research Institutes
Department
Type
DUNS #
080481880
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10010
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Paraskevis, Dimitrios; Nikolopoulos, Georgios K; Sypsa, Vana et al. (2018) Molecular investigation of HIV-1 cross-group transmissions during an outbreak among people who inject drugs (2011-2014) in Athens, Greece. Infect Genet Evol 62:11-16
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Smyrnov, Pavlo; Williams, Leslie D; Korobchuk, Ania et al. (2018) Risk network approaches to locating undiagnosed HIV cases in Odessa, Ukraine. J Int AIDS Soc 21:
Kostaki, Evangelia; Magiorkinis, Gkikas; Psichogiou, Mina et al. (2017) Detailed Molecular Surveillance of the HIV-1 Outbreak Among People who Inject Drugs (PWID) in Athens During a Period of Four Years. Curr HIV Res 15:396-404
Friedman, Samuel R; Pouget, Enrique R; Sandoval, Milagros et al. (2017) Interpersonal Attacks on the Dignity of Members of HIV Key Populations: A Descriptive and Exploratory Study. AIDS Behav 21:2561-2578
Vasylyeva, Tetyana I; Friedman, Samuel R; Gensburg, Lenore et al. (2017) Engagement in sex work does not increase HIV risk for women who inject drugs in Ukraine. J Public Health (Oxf) 39:e103-e110

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