Hormonal contraceptive use, herpes simplex virus infection, and risk of HIV-1 acquisition among Kenyan women

AIDS (London, England), 21(13), 1771-1777

DOI 10.1097/QAD.0b013e328270388a PMID 17690576 Source

Abstract

Background

Studies of the effect of hormonal contraceptive use on the risk of HIV-1 acquisition have generated conflicting results. A recent study from Uganda and Zimbabwe found that women using hormonal contraception were at increased risk for HIV-1 if they were seronegative for herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2), but not if they were HSV-2 seropositive.

Objective

To explore the effect of HSV-2 infection on the relationship between hormonal contraception and HIV-1 in a high-risk population. Hormonal contraception has previously been associated with increased HIV-1 risk in this population.

Methods

Data were from a prospective cohort study of 1206 HIV-1 seronegative sex workers from Mombasa, Kenya who were followed monthly. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards analyses were used to adjust for demographic and behavioral measures and incident sexually transmitted diseases.

Results

Two hundred and thirty-three women acquired HIV-1 (8.7/100 person-years). HSV-2 prevalence (81%) and incidence (25.4/100 person-years) were high. In multivariate analysis, including adjustment for HSV-2, HIV-1 acquisition was associated with use of oral contraceptive pills [adjusted hazard ratio (HR), 1.46; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.00-2.13] and depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (adjusted HR, 1.73; 95% CI, 1.28-2.34). The effect of contraception on HIV-1 susceptibility did not differ significantly between HSV-2 seronegative versus seropositive women. HSV-2 infection was associated with elevated HIV-1 risk (adjusted HR, 3.58; 95% CI, 1.64-7.82).

Conclusions

In this group of high-risk African women, hormonal contraception and HSV-2 infection were both associated with increased risk for HIV-1 acquisition. HIV-1 risk associated with hormonal contraceptive use was not related to HSV-2 serostatus.

Topics

hormonal contraception hiv risk, depot medroxyprogesterone hiv acquisition, oral contraceptives hiv susceptibility, hsv-2 hiv risk factors, birth control pills sexually transmitted infections, contraceptive use infection risk, depo provera hiv transmission, hormonal contraception immunological effects, herpes simplex hiv coinfection, contraception sexually transmitted disease risk

Cite this article

Baeten, J., Benki, S., Chohan, V., Lavreys, L., McClelland, R. S., Mandaliya, K., Ndinya‐Achola, J., Jaoko, W., & Overbaugh, J. (2007). Hormonal contraceptive use, herpes simplex virus infection, and risk of HIV-1 acquisition among Kenyan women. *AIDS (London, England)*, *21*(13), 1771-1777. https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0b013e328270388a

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