Reconstructing MSM Sexual Networks to Guide PrEP Distribution Strategies for HIV Prevention
Jo\~ao Br\'azia, Istv\'an Z. Kiss, Alexandre P. Francisco, and Andreia Sofia Teixeira

TL;DR
This study uses network reconstruction from egocentric data to evaluate HIV transmission among MSM and finds that targeted PrEP strategies based on network centrality metrics are more effective than uniform approaches, emphasizing the importance of network structure in intervention planning.
Contribution
It demonstrates how uncertainties in network reconstruction impact HIV prevention strategies and identifies effective targeted PrEP approaches based on network centrality measures.
Findings
Assortativity by degree reduces HIV prevalence by 17%.
Targeted PrEP based on degree or k-shell centrality outperforms uniform strategies.
Network structure significantly influences HIV transmission dynamics.
Abstract
Men who have sex with men (MSM) remain disproportionately affected by HIV, yet optimizing Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) distribution remains a public health challenge. Current guidelines and most modelling studies do not incorporate sociodemographic or network-level factors that shape transmission. While network reconstruction from egocentric data has been studied, the relative importance of demographic mixing dimensions remains uncertain. Using data from 4,667 MSM participants, we show that uncertainty in network reconstruction from egocentric survey data - specifically whether assortativity by age or race is incorporated - affects simulated HIV prevalence under the same observed PrEP uptake. We simulate HIV transmission over 50 years across this structural space and evaluate whether empirically observed uptake reaches transmission-critical network positions. Network structure…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
