A study presented at
the 15th European AIDS Conference
yesterday found evidence that the majority of migrants living with HIV in
Europe, and who were diagnosed less than five years ago, probably acquired the
virus in their host country rather than the one in which they were born. The aMASE
(Advancing Migrant Access to Health Services in Europe) study found that the
proportion of people with a documented or probable date of HIV infection later
than their move to, or within, Europe was higher than those with a documented
or probable pre-migration infection date, and that this applied to all risk
groups, all areas of origin, and both sexes.
One important caveat
is that for a large minority of people (in the case of people from sub-Saharan African, as many
as 48%) the date of infection could not be established. Another caveat is that this
was an internet survey and might favour replies from people with more
recent infection. Nonetheless, the findings are striking; in men who
have sex with men in particular, the vast majority acquired HIV in their host
country rather than in their country of origin.
The aMASE survey is
an initiative of Eurocoord – a European Union (EU)-funded network of researchers and clinics who pool patient data contained
within four existing European patient cohorts (EuroSIDA, COHERE, CASCADE and
PENTA).
Débora Álvarez del Arco told the conference that of approximately 29,000 new diagnoses reported in
the EU in 2013, only 57% of people were diagnosed in the country in which they
had been born. Of the remainder, 13% came from sub-Saharan Africa, 9% from
other counties within Europe, 5% from Latin America and the Caribbean, 4% from
north America, Australasia and the Middle East, and 12% were of unknown origin.
Half of the countries in the EU and European Economic Area report
that some groups of migrants in their country are at increased risk of HIV.
The aMASE survey was
designed to see if migrants were at more risk of HIV in their home country or
their host country. Computer interviews were conducted between 2013 and 2015 with
2249 migrants living in nine European countries. In order of the number
interviewed, most interviewees were living in Spain, the UK, Belgium, Portugal, Greece, Switzerland, the
Netherlands, Italy and Germany. They had to have been born elsewhere than the
country in which they were living, be over 18, have been diagnosed less than five years ago,
and have been in their host country for more than six months.
During the
questionnaire, participants where asked when and where they were diagnosed, were
asked about HIV risk behaviours before and after migrating, and also gave
permission for researchers to contact the clinic where they had been diagnosed –
whether in their host country or birth country – and to conduct an independent interview
with their clinician to confirm diagnosis and probable date of infection.
Of 1784 respondents
with enough data to estimate an infection date, 703 had had an HIV-negative test
result within three years prior to testing HIV-positive, while 532 had no data to
directly assign place of HIV acquisition but a good estimate could be made on
the basis of behavioural data – for instance that the respondent had had sex
with men before migrating but not after, or injected drugs after migrating but
not before.
On the basis of
these data, the respondents were divided into five groups according to their
probable infection time. The first group were people where it could not be
established whether they had acquired HIV before or after migrating. The second
and third groups were people who had, on the basis of diagnosis date, definitely acquired HIV ether before they moved, or after. The fourth and fifth were groups who had
probably acquired HIV before or after they moved: in these the date of infection was less
certain but was narrowed down to before or after moving by reports of risk
behaviour, CD4 count or AIDS symptoms, or a reported but not clinically
confirmed positive HIV test before moving.
The respondents’
average age was 38 and 68% were men. In two-thirds of the men, the main risk
factor was sex with other men, a quarter reported only having sex with women, 6% reported
injecting drugs, and 3% reported no risk factor. The vast majority (97%) of
women reported sex with men as the risk factor and 2% injecting drugs.
In terms of national
origin, 33% came from sub-Saharan Africa, 32% Latin America or the Caribbean,
5% Asia, 4% North America, Australasia or the Middle East, and the other 26%
were migrants within Europe: 11% were from western Europe, 10% central and 5%
eastern Europe.
In 68% of
participants, the date of their HIV diagnosis could be confirmed.
In all national categories
and for both sexes, it was estimated that more people had probably acquired HIV in
their host country than in their birth country. The area where there was least predominance of host-country
infections was sub-Saharan Africa: 22% of people from Africa had probably acquired HIV in
their home country, and 31% in their host country, with nearly half (47%)
having an infection date that could not be determined.
In the other
national categories – who were predominantly men who had sex with men – the difference
was much more striking. Sixty-eight per cent of people from Latin America and
the Caribbean had probably acquired HIV after migrating, 57% of Asians, 58% of eastern
Europeans, 60% of central Europeans and 69% of western Europeans. The
proportion of these categories who had probably already been living with HIV when they migrated were
8%, 18%, 12%, 8% and 12% respectively, while in 20-32% the date of infection
could not be determined.
Thirty-six per cent
of heterosexuals, both men and women, had acquired HIV in their host country and
only 18% of women and 13% of men had definitely acquired HIV in their home country. For
men who have sex with men, 72% acquired HIV after migrating and only 11% before.
And for people who injected drugs, 67% acquired HIV after migrating and only 15%
before.
Débora Álvarez del Arco told the conference that the figures showed that people from Western
Europe and Latin America and the Caribbean had a particularly high probability
of acquiring HIV post-migration, as did men who have sex with men. She and
audience members called for more research into migrant vulnerability to HIV in
the countries to which they migrate.