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Heterosexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 from transfusion recipients to their sex partners.
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1994
Year
ImmunologyHomosexualityHeterosexual TransmissionMale RecipientsSocial SciencesHuman RetrovirusSex PartnersLookback ProceduresAdvanced ImmunodeficiencySexual And Reproductive HealthPrimary ImmunodeficiencyTransfusion RecipientsVirologyChronic Viral InfectionHivSexual BehaviorEpidemiologyAids PathogenesisSexual HealthTreatment And PreventionMedicineSexual Orientation
Using lookback procedures and other methods, we identified and then prospectively followed human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected transfusion recipients and their sex partners to determine AIDS incidence and risks of heterosexual transmission of HIV-1. At enrollment, 7 of 32 (21.9%) female partners of male recipients were themselves infected with HIV-1, as compared with none of 14 male partners of female recipients (p = 0.08). No additional episodes of transmission were observed. The prevalence of advanced immunodeficiency at enrollment was similar in male and female recipients. Male recipients with advanced immunodeficiency (CD4+ lymphocyte count < or = 0.20 x 10(9)/L or a history of clinical AIDS) at enrollment were more likely to have infected their female partners (odds ratio = 7.9; p = 0.03) than men with neither condition. Similarly, AIDS-free survival, as estimated by the product-limit method, was lower among male transmitters than among male nontransmitters (p = 0.01). Transmission was not associated with frequency of unprotected vaginal intercourse. Our data suggest that HIV-1-infected men who develop immunodeficiency rapidly are more likely to infect their sex partners and that the greater efficiency of male-to-female HIV-1 transmission is not explained by a greater number of sexual contacts or more advanced immunodeficiency in index subjects.