Publications by authors named "Natasha Osner"

An increasing proportion of new HIV diagnoses in the United Kingdom and other European countries are attributable to non-B subtype infections, mainly among black Africans with infections heterosexually acquired in sub-Saharan Africa. We examined whether there was evidence for onward transmission of non-B subtypes within an ethnically diverse HIV-1-infected cohort in South London. Three hundred eighty-four HIV-1-infected patients attending Kings College Hospital were subtyped using an in-house enzyme-linked immunoassay and env sequencing.

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Samples from 457 randomly selected HIV-1 infected patients attending King's College Hospital were analysed using a subtype specific enzyme immunoassay. All serotyped non-Bs that provided unambiguous sequence and for which sufficient sample was available (n=100), which included three serotyped subtype B samples were further analysed by env sequencing and subtyping using neighbour joining phylogenetic analysis, the NCBI Retrovirus Genotyping tool and the Los Alamos BLAST search tool. Of the serotyped viruses, 45% (n=204) samples were subtype B.

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Objective: To estimate the trend in HIV incidence between 1995 and 2001 in men who have sex with men (MSM) attending sexually transmitted infection (STI) clinics in the UK.

Design: The Serological Testing Algorithm for Recent HIV Seroconversion (STARHS) was applied to serum specimens from MSM attending 15 STI clinics collaborating in an HIV unlinked anonymous prevalence serosurvey.

Methods: STARHS was performed on anti-HIV-1 positive specimens and HIV incidence rates determined.

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The Abbott HIVAB and Vironostika HIV-1 Microelisa assays have both been validated for use in the serological testing algorithm for recent HIV seroconversion (STARHS). This ability to identify recently-acquired infection provides valuable insight into the epidemic. The availability of each assay during different periods led to longitudinal studies of annual HIV incidence being based on a mixture of results from each.

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