Abstract

Few systematic efforts have been made to characterize the prevalence of HIV types, HIV-1 groups, and HIV-1 group M subtypes within a specified geographic area, and few US studies like the one by Sides et al. [1] in this issue of the Journal of Infectious Diseases have been published. Their findings are important: they demonstrate a 95% prevalence of non-B HIV1 subtypes; a predominance of subtypes C, A, and CRF02_AG/Al; and a substantial diversity of subtypes among the 87 HIV-infected African-born individuals in

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