- Cousins, Matthew M;
- Laeyendecker, Oliver;
- Beauchamp, Geetha;
- Brookmeyer, Ronald;
- Towler, William I;
- Hudelson, Sarah E;
- Khaki, Leila;
- Koblin, Beryl;
- Chesney, Margaret;
- Moore, Richard D;
- Kelen, Gabor D;
- Coates, Thomas;
- Celum, Connie;
- Buchbinder, Susan P;
- Seage, George R;
- Quinn, Thomas C;
- Donnell, Deborah;
- Eshleman, Susan H
- Editor(s): Tripathy, Srikanth Prasad
Background
Cross-sectional assessment of HIV incidence relies on laboratory methods to discriminate between recent and non-recent HIV infection. Because HIV diversifies over time in infected individuals, HIV diversity may serve as a biomarker for assessing HIV incidence. We used a high resolution melting (HRM) diversity assay to compare HIV diversity in adults with different stages of HIV infection. This assay provides a single numeric HRM score that reflects the level of genetic diversity of HIV in a sample from an infected individual.Methods
HIV diversity was measured in 203 adults: 20 with acute HIV infection (RNA positive, antibody negative), 116 with recent HIV infection (tested a median of 189 days after a previous negative HIV test, range 14-540 days), and 67 with non-recent HIV infection (HIV infected >2 years). HRM scores were generated for two regions in gag, one region in pol, and three regions in env.Results
Median HRM scores were higher in non-recent infection than in recent infection for all six regions tested. In multivariate models, higher HRM scores in three of the six regions were independently associated with non-recent HIV infection.Conclusions
The HRM diversity assay provides a simple, scalable method for measuring HIV diversity. HRM scores, which reflect the genetic diversity in a viral population, may be useful biomarkers for evaluation of HIV incidence, particularly if multiple regions of the HIV genome are examined.