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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4215-4217, Vol. 43, No. 8
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.8.4215-4217.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Unité de Virologie Médicale, Unité d'Hygiène Hospitalière et Service des Maladies Infectieuses, Hôpital Robert Debré, Centre Hospitalo-Universitaire de Reims, and IFR-53/EA-3798, Faculté de Médecine de Reims, Reims,1 Unité de Virologie Médicale et Service d'Immunologie Clinique, Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou,2 Centre Médical de l'Institut Pasteur, Paris, France3
Received 22 February 2005/ Returned for modification 25 April 2005/ Accepted 19 May 2005
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In the present study, 534 HIV-1-infected outpatients were prospectively enrolled in two hospital settings for routine follow-up. The first prospective study included a cohort of 434 consecutive outpatients (324 men [mean age, 38 years] and 110 women [mean age, 43 years]) attending the Reims University Medical Center and associated hospitals in the Champagne-Ardennes and Picardie provinces (northeastern France). The second prospective study included a cohort of 100 outpatients (63 men [mean age, 45 years] and 37 women [mean age, 39 years]) attending the Service d'Immunologie Clinique of the Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou, Paris, France. Among the 534 study outpatients, 507 (95%) were European Caucasians and 27 (5%) were from Africa or Asia, where they had initially acquired HIV-1 infection. Signed informed consent was obtained from each study patient, and an institutional review board approved the two parallel clinical investigations. HSV-1 and HSV-2 type-specific serologic tests were carried out using two commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (Champagne-Ardennes and Picardie provinces, SeroHSV-1 and SeroHSV-2 [BMD Diagnostics, Marne-la-Vallée, France]; Paris, HerpeSelect HSV-1 and HSV-2 [Focus Technologies, Eurobio, Courtaboeuf, France]) (1, 6).
Statistical analysis was performed using STATA version 7 Software (STATA Inc.). Comparison of quantitative variables was performed using Student's t test or the nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test when necessary. Chi-square or Fisher's exact tests were used for comparison of the discrete data, and the odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were also calculated. P values under or equal to 0.05 were considered significant. All the variables demonstrating a P value under or equal to 0.05 by univariate statistical analyses were then included in a forward stepwise logistic regression analysis, allowing the calculation of independent risk factors.
Among the 534 study subjects, the overall rates of HSV-1 and HSV-2 antibody prevalence were 86% and 59%, with 52% HSV-1-HSV-2 coinfection; HSV-1 and HSV-2 antibody seroprevalences were similar between males and females (92% versus 80% for HSV-1, P = 0.09; 62% versus 57% for HSV-2, P = 0.78, respectively). In the first cohort of 434 subjects, 223 (51%) individuals demonstrated a positive HSV-2 serological status while 66 (66%) of 100 subjects in the second cohort were seropositive for HSV-2 (51 versus 66%; P = 0.08). Among the 434 subjects from the Champagne-Ardenne and Picardie provinces, we conducted a case-control study focusing on demographic features and possible sexual risk factors for HSV-2 seropositivity (Table 1). In a univariate analysis, two variables were significantly associated with HSV-2 seropositivity, including an age above 45 years and high-risk sexual behavior. In a multivariate analysis, the variables age above 45 years and high-risk sexual behavior appeared as two independent risk factors for HSV-2 seropositivity (OR = 1.68, 95% CI = 1.13 to 2.49, P = 0.010, and OR = 1.93, 95% CI = 1.13 to 3.31, P = 0.016, respectively) (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Sociodemographic and behavioral characteristics of a cohort of 434 HIV-infected patients from the Champagne Ardennes and Picardie provinces of France according to HSV-2 serostatus
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In the present serological survey, nearly two-thirds of the selected HIV-1-infected adults living in Paris and northeastern France were seropositive for HSV-2 infection. Similar rates of seroprevalence had been previously reported in American, African, and Asian HIV-1-infected subpopulations (5, 11). HSV-2 antibody prevalence has been reported to be 17% in the French general adult population (4) and to range from 4 to 24% in other, similar, European populations (5, 8). Our HSV-2 antibody prevalence appeared to be statistically significantly higher than that previously reported by Malkin et al. (4) in the French general population (17.2% of 12,735 subjects), even after the values were adjusted according to age or gender (P < 0.001). Taken together, our findings showed high rates of HSV-2 antibody prevalence in two cohorts of French HIV-1-infected outpatients, suggesting that HSV-2 infection may be markedly associated with HIV-1 infection in France. Two previous studies had reported that the seroprevalence rates of HSV-2 infection were 48% and 75% in U.S. and German HIV-1-infected subpopulations, respectively (3, 5). A further HSV seroepidemiological survey including a representative number of French cohorts of HIV-1-infected outpatients is needed to confirm our present findings.
In the present study, only 22 (10%) of 223 HSV-2-HIV-1-coinfected outpatients from the first study cohort had a clinical history of genital herpes at the time of inclusion or within the 12-month period before. By contrast, the majority of HSV-2-seropositive patients (69%) were totally unaware of their genital infection at the time of inclusion whereas the remaining 47 patients (21%) were aware of their HSV-2 status by a history of past genital herpes outbreaks. These findings demonstrate an unexpectedly high proportion of subclinical and undiagnosed HSV-2 infection in HIV-1-infected individuals. In addition, the occurrence of HSV-2 outbreaks in the study population appeared not to be associated with lack of antiretroviral treatment or with circulating CD4 T-lymphocyte counts, suggesting that HSV-2 recurrences may be poorly or not influenced by antiretroviral treatment, as previously reported (7). Interestingly, multivariate statistical analysis revealed that HIV-1-infected subjects aged more than 45 years or with high-risk sexual behavior were more likely to be infected with HSV-2. These findings are consistent with results reported in several previous seroepidemiological studies which identified sexual behavior and age as risk factors for HSV-2 seropositivity (12). This likely reflects the association of risk of HSV-2 acquisition with the cumulative increase in the number of sexual partners and the duration of sexual activity in the context of the chronic nature of HSV-2 infection, particularly in association with unprotected sexual intercourse (9, 10).
High rates of HSV-2 seroprevalence in the HIV-1-infected subpopulation could have major consequences for the risk levels of transmission and acquisition of HSV-2 or HIV-1 infection via sexual intercourse and consequently could have major implications for the medical care of HSV-2-HIV-1-coinfected patients. Indeed, genital herpes is now considered one of the major cofactors increasing the rate of HIV-1 transmission by the sexual route (12). Coinfected individuals appeared to be subject to high levels of asymptomatic HSV-2 genital infection, which could increase their genital infectivity for HIV-1 and therefore the rates of HIV transmission to potentially exposed HIV-1-negative sexual partners (10). Such a situation could be particularly critical in discordant heterosexual or homosexual couples in which one of the two partners is HIV-1-HSV-2 coinfected while the other is not infected with HIV-1 (2, 3, 10).
In conclusion, the results of the present study demonstrate high proportions of subclinical and undiagnosed HSV-2 infection in French HIV-1-infected outpatients. Moreover, our findings suggest that HSV type-specific serological testing in the French HIV-1-infected subpopulation could be an efficient strategy to diagnose clinically asymptomatic HSV-2 infections and therefore to reduce the risk of HSV-2 and HIV-1 sexual transmission by convenient prophylactic counseling against unprotected intercourse.
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