Citation:
Kostaki EG, Papadimitriou E, Chatzopoulou F, Roussos S, Tsirogianni E, Psichogiou M, Goulis I, Kalamitsis G, Kefala AM, Skoura L, et al. Molecular investigation of a new HIV-1 outbreak among people who inject drugs in Greece: evidence for a dense network of HIV-1 transmission. Sex Transm InfectSex Transm InfectSex Transm Infect. 2025.
Abstract:
OBJECTIVES: Αn HIV-1 outbreak was identified among people who inject drugs (PWID) in Thessaloniki, Greece, during 2019-2021. We aimed to investigate the characteristics of this outbreak by means of molecular epidemiology. METHODS: We analysed 57 sequences from PWID sampled in Thessaloniki during 2019-2023. Phylogenetic trees were inferred using all subtype A sequences from PWID sampled since 1999 in Greece and reference sequences (n=4824). Phylodynamic analysis was performed using the Bayesian birth-death skyline serial model. RESULTS: Most of the 57 study sequences belonged to sub-subtypes A6 (49, 86%) and A1 (4, 7%). Phylogenetic analysis revealed that two (50%) A1 sequences clustered together and 47 (95.9%) A6 sequences fell within three PWID-specific phylogenetic clusters. The 99.6% and 77.9% of pairwise genetic distances within the largest and second largest PWID clusters were lower than 0.015 substitutions/site. Using a more stringent threshold (0.0015 substitutions/site), we identified five networks of sequences from PWID infected within 1 year. The effective reproduction number (R(e)) started to increase at the beginning of 2019 and remained high almost until the end of 2021. The estimated time from HIV-1 infection to diagnosis showed an increasing trend during 2020-2023 (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The regional clustering of the PWID sequences and their low genetic divergence confirm its local spreading and the recent nature of the outbreak. Using a stringent genetic distance threshold, we showed that HIV-1 transmission occurred among large groups of PWID. The time of epidemic growth coincided with the time of the initial identification, and HIV-1 transmission continued at high rates until 2021.Notes:
1472-3263Kostaki, Evangelia GeorgiaOrcid: 0000-0002-3346-0930Papadimitriou, EvangeliaChatzopoulou, FaniRoussos, SotiriosTsirogianni, EfrosiniPsichogiou, MinaGoulis, IoannisKalamitsis, GeorgiosKefala, Anastasia MariaSkoura, LemoniaChrysanthidis, TheofilosMetallidis, SymeonTsiara, ChrysaParaskeva, DimitraMagiorkinis, GkikasBeloukas, ApostolosOrcid: 0000-0001-5639-0528Hatzakis, AngelosSypsa, VanaChatzidimitriou, DimitriosParaskevis, DimitriosJournal ArticleEnglandSex Transm Infect. 2025 May 28:sextrans-2024-056452. doi: 10.1136/sextrans-2024-056452.