Title: Partners in Prevention
1Partners in Prevention
- Jim Hughes
- in collaboration with, and many slides stolen
from - Connie Celum
- Mary Campbell
- Jai Lingappa
- Gerry Myers
- Jim Mullins
2HIV and Herpes
- HIV HSV-2 ? increased HIV viral loads
3HIV and Herpes
- HIV HSV-2 ? increased risk of transmitting the
virus
4HIV and Herpes
- Acyclovir (and related drugs) are very effective
in suppressing the HSV-2 virus - Acyclovir has no direct effect on HIV but
- Acyclovir ? ? HSV-2 replication ? ? HIV viral
load ? ? HIV transmission - Can we reduce the risk of HIV transmission in
HSV-2 HIV-positive individuals by treating
their HSV-2 infection with acyclovir?
?
5Partners in PreventionHSV-2 Suppression to
Prevent HIV Transmission
1 endpoint HIV infection in HIV-negative partner
6(No Transcript)
7Partners in Prevention
- HIV-infected partner (also HSV-2 infected)
index - HIV-uninfected partner partner
- Intervention Daily acyclovir (400 mg, bid) given
to the index - Primary outcome HIV infection measured on the
partner compare infection rates between the two
arms - Two analyses of interest
- All transmissions (easy)
- Only transmissions from the index (hard)
8Is the index the source of the partners HIV-1
infection?
- HIV viral sequence is extremely variable due to
rapid mutation rate - Procedures for determining linkage first
developed by Gerry Myers, Jim Mullins, Glen
Satten and colleagues for the Florida Dentist
Case in the early 1990s
- Phylogenetic Trees
- Genetic Distance
- Amino Acid Signature Pattern
Ou, et al 1992. Science 2561165 Learn and
Mullins. 2003. HIV Sequence Compendium 200322.
9PhylogeneticsBasic Concepts
- Trees are comprised of tips, branches and nodes
- Tips represent the actual gene sequences used to
create the tree - A branch is a representation of the genetic
distance separating tip sequences. - A node represents the hypothetical ancestor of
the sequences on the branches stemming from it - Monophyletic group Clade
- terms used interchangeably
- implies descent from a single common ancestor
10Simple Phylogenetic Tree
monophyletic sequence pair
11Genetic Distance
Number of mismatched
positions Distance ______________________
Number of positions in alignment
- the number of nucleotide changes needed to make
one sequence the same as another in an alignment - can be calculated from pairwise comparisons or
estimated by tracing distances between sequences
on a phylogram
12PhylogeneticLinkage Analysis
13.4
3.3
13Is the index the source of the partners HIV-1
infection?
- Monophyletic pair
- Gives yes/no answer, but no degree of uncertainty
- Should intervening sequence automatically rule
out linkage? - Should lack of an intervening sequence
automatically confirm linkage? - Genetic Distance
- Linked partners should have sequences that are
close unlinked partners should have sequences
that are not close - Is there a magic distance which separates
linked and unlinked? Not quite but
14Smoothed probabilities for distances between
sequence pairs known to be linked or unlinked
linked unlinked
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
Distance
15Bayesian Classification of partner linkage
D distance P(D linked) probability of
distance D assuming linkage (based on
intra-individual sequence pairs and partners
known to be linked) P(D not linked)
probability of distance D assuming no linkage
(based on sequence pairs from apparently unlinked
individuals) P(linked) assumed probability of
linkage before looking at D. P(linked D)
posterior probability of linkage base decision
on this.
16- Issues/Challenges
- At present, the algorithm is based on distances
only. In principle, additional quantitative data
could be incorporated into the information D. - What should the prior P(linked) be?
17- Issues/Challenges
- At present, the algorithm is based on distances
only. In principle, additional quantitative data
could be incorporated into the information D. - What should the prior P(linked) be?
- We set the prior equal to the proportion of
linked partnerships over all PIP seroconverters - Most decisions not very sensitive to choice of
prior
18- Issues/Challenges
- Classification may be based on individual
sequence pairs (multiple per partnership) or
consensus sequence pairs (generally one per
partnership)
- Single consensus sequence may not represent all
variants - Combining information from multiple sequence
pairs poses methodologic challenges - The transmitting partner may have multiple
variants but only one may match the variant found
in the newly infected partner. Should this be
considered linked? What if the situation is
reversed?
19Pair 58
20- Contrasts between Bayesian and phylogenetic
approaches - Bayesian classifier based on distances only and
does not explicitly consider context (i.e.
monophyletic or not) - In this application, monophyletic approach tends
to more conservative (more likely to call the
sequences unlinked) more appropriate for
courtroom? - Use of explicit prior assumption in Bayesian
formulation allows control of conservativeness - Bayesian classifier can incorporate additional
information on partnership (e.g. gender, reported
number of sex partners) in through prior
21Questions
- What scientific question is the PIP trial trying
to answer? - Why is it difficult to to determine if one person
has transmitted the HIV virus to another (even if
you have virus samples from both individuals)? - What genetic measurement does the Bayesian
classifier use to determine the probability of
transmission?