Abstract

The transitions study examines HIV risk among adolescent girls and young women through their sexual life course from first sex, to past and current engagement in casual sex, transactional sex, and, for some, formal sex work (FSW). Understanding the timing of HIV infection and the circumstances around early infection in young females is critical to HIV prevention interventions. We inferred time since HIV infection using next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the HIV pol gene isolated from cross-sectional samples among high-risk young women in Dnipro, Ukraine. Dried blood spots were collected on Whatman 903 cards from young women aged 14–24 engaged in casual sex (n = 894), transactional sex (n = 464), and FSW (n = 452). The HIV pol gene was sequenced using an in-house NGS HIV drug resistance mutation genotyping assay. Time since HIV infection was inferred using an online tool as described by Puller et al. (2017) freely available at https://hiv.biozentrum.unibas.ch/ETI/. The mean estimated time since HIV infection (ETI) for participants engaged in casual sex, transactional sex, and FSW is 1.98, 1.84, and 3.01 years, respectively. ETI was used to determine the duration of HIV infection for each participant and compared to the number of sexually active years prior to FSW. Among FSW, 61 per cent of participants were infected with HIV prior to entry into sex work. In general, ETI from NGS data suggests that FSWs were infected with HIV before entry into FSW. Expansion of targeted prevention programs beyond FSW could play an important role in mitigating HIV transmission at the population level.

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