HIV Seropositivity: Barin F

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "HIV Seropositivity," originating from Planet Earth —» Barin F.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Editorial Monitoring HIV epidemiology using assays for recent infection: where are we? free! 2008

Barin F, Nardone A. · No affiliation provided · Euro Surveill. · Pubmed #18775294 links to  free full text

This publication has no abstract.

2 Article Characteristics of the env genes of HIV type 1 quasispecies in long-term nonprogressors with broadly neutralizing antibodies. 2008

Braibant M, Agut H, Rouzioux C, Costagliola D, Autran B, Barin F. · Université François-Rabelais, Tours, France. · J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. · Pubmed #18197126 No free full text.

Abstract: Primary isolates of different subtypes of HIV-1 can be neutralized in vitro by the broadly neutralizing antibodies (NAbs) found in the sera of a small number of HIV-1-infected patients. This broad response is most frequent in long-term nonprogressors (LTNPs). We investigated whether the presence of NAbs in the sera of some LTNPs was associated with particular properties of the envelope glycoproteins of the variants found in these patients. Toward that aim, 147 env gene fragments (encoding almost the entire gp120) amplified from the proviral DNA of 5 LTNPs who developed broadly NAbs (NAb+) and of 4 LTNPs who did not develop such broadly NAbs (NAb-) were cloned, sequenced, and compared. We found that the development of broadly NAbs was associated with high viral loads, greater diversity in the gp120 of the viruses infecting these patients, and longer V1 sequences and additional N-gly sites in V1. In addition, a higher proportion of defective clones was found among the env genes of NAb- patients (25% to 93%)-particularly those with lower viral loads and low levels of env diversity-than among those of NAb+ patients (7% to 19%).

3 Article Do tests devised to detect recent HIV-1 infection provide reliable estimates of incidence in Africa? 2007

Sakarovitch C, Rouet F, Murphy G, Minga AK, Alioum A, Dabis F, Costagliola D, Salamon R, Parry JV, Barin F. · INSERM EMI 03 38, Institut de Santé Publique, Epidémiologie, et Développement (ISPED), Université Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, Bordeaux, France. · J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. · Pubmed #17460475 No free full text.

Abstract: The objective of this study was to assess the performance of 4 biologic tests designed to detect recent HIV-1 infections in estimating incidence in West Africa (BED, Vironostika, Avidity, and IDE-V3). These tests were assessed on a panel of 135 samples from 79 HIV-1-positive regular blood donors from Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, whose date of seroconversion was known (Agence Nationale de Recherches sur le SIDA et les Hépatites Virales 1220 cohort). The 135 samples included 26 from recently infected patients (< or =180 days), 94 from AIDS-free subjects with long-standing infection (>180 days), and 15 from patients with clinical AIDS. The performance of each assay in estimating HIV incidence was assessed through simulations. The modified commercial assays gave the best results for sensitivity (100% for both), and the IDE-V3 technique gave the best result for specificity (96.3%). In a context like Abidjan, with a 10% HIV-1 prevalence associated with a 1% annual incidence, the estimated test-specific annual incidence rates would be 1.2% (IDE-V3), 5.5% (Vironostika), 6.2% (BED), and 11.2% (Avidity). Most of the specimens falsely classified as incident cases were from patients infected for >180 days but <1 year. The authors conclude that none of the 4 methods could currently be used to estimate HIV-1 incidence routinely in Côte d'Ivoire but that further adaptations might enhance their accuracy.

4 Article Impact of a harm-reduction policy on HIV and hepatitis C virus transmission among drug users: recent French data--the ANRS-Coquelicot Study. 2006

Jauffret-Roustide M, Emmanuelli J, Quaglia M, Barin F, Arduin P, Laporte A, Desenclos JC. · National Institute for Public Health Surveillance, Saint-Maurice, France. · Subst Use Misuse. · Pubmed #17002994 No free full text.

Abstract: In France a harm-reduction policy was implemented in the late 1980s with the aim of reducing the prevalence of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection among drug users. The ANRS-Coquelicot survey was designed to measure the prevalence of HIV and HCV infection among drug users and to examine determinants of at-risk behaviors. In 2002, information was collected from 166 drug users recruited in all types of services specializing in drug use intervention and harm reduction in Marseille, France. Self-reported HIV and HCV serostatus was compared with the results of serological tests done on capillary blood collected on filter paper. The self-reported and biologically documented prevalence rates of HIV infection were identical (22%). In contrast, the self-reported prevalence of HCV infection was 52%, whereas the biologically documented prevalence was 73%. Overall, 30% of HCV-infected drug users were unaware of their status. Forty-four percent of drug users under 30 years of age were HCV seropositive, suggesting that they had been infected early during drug use. The harm-reduction policy seems to have had a marked impact on HIV transmission among drug users but a much more limited impact on HCV transmission. The limitations and implications of the study are discussed.

5 Article Serologic and genetic characterization of HIV type 1 subtypes on Reunion Island. 1999

Brengel-Pesce K, Innocenti-Francillard P, Morand P, Michault A, Poubeau P, Barin F, Saragosti S, Seigneurin JM. · Department of Virology/RHAP CNRS, Faculty of Medicine/University Hospital, Grenoble, France. · AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. · Pubmed #10381166 No free full text.

Abstract: The aim of this study was to determine the HIV subtypes present on Reunion Island, a French island located in the Indian Ocean, where the first case of AIDS was diagnosed in 1987. Paired sera and blood samples were collected between September 1996 and September 1997 from 53 HIV-1-positive patients. Subtyping was performed by serotyping with a previously described subtype-specific enzyme immunoassay (SSEIA) and by genotyping with the heteroduplex mobility assay (HMA). When samples gave uninterpretable results with either of the methods, or discordant results, the V3 env region was sequenced and genetic subtypes were determined by phylogenetic analysis. Genetic subtyping showed that 48 of 53 patients were infected with HIV-1 subtype B (90.5%). This high prevalence of subtype B on Reunion Island is probably due to the regular exchanges with metropolitan France. The other five patients were infected with subtype A (9.5%); they had been directly linked to African populations. Of the 48 subtype B samples, 44 (91.7%) were correctly subtyped by SSEIA and 43 (89.6%) by HMA. However, the SSEIA did not allow the subtyping of A strains in three of five patients. Thus, the SSEIA could be an alternative routine technique for screening subtype B versus nonsubtype B HIV-1 strains.