P-263. Informing Multi-level HIV Prevention Strategies Through Molecular Network Analysis in Georgia
Carlos s Saldana, Olakunle Ogunbayo, Aimee Graciela Rivera-Solis, Adaiah Soibi-Harry, Masonia Traylor, Claudia E Ordóñez, Shirin Jabbarzadeh, Juan D Patino-Mateus, Santiago Ramon, Amalia Aldredge, Jenna Gettings, Daniel Mauck, Kirsten Oliver, Latasha Terry, Jane Y Scott

TL;DR
This study uses molecular network analysis in Georgia to identify HIV transmission patterns and inform targeted prevention strategies, especially in vulnerable communities.
Contribution
The paper introduces a multi-level framework integrating molecular data with behavioral and structural factors to guide equitable public health interventions.
Findings
High-risk networks include young Black women and Latino men with significant behavioral risks and low PrEP uptake.
Care engagement and viral suppression were lower in networks from more socially vulnerable areas.
Named partners showed poor HIV testing and PrEP access, indicating gaps in prevention efforts.
Abstract
Georgia remains heavily impacted by HIV, particularly among Black and Latino communities. HIV molecular epidemiology (HME) uses HIV pol gene sequence similarity to detect rapidly transmitting networks in near real time, supporting timely public health response and resource allocation. However, integration of behavioral, sociodemographic, and network-level dynamics into HME-informed interventions remains limited. To address this, we developed epidemiologic profiles of five HIV molecular networks in Georgia and applied a multi-level framework to guide equitable, data-driven public health action.Table 1.Demographic, Behavioral, Structural, and Prior STI Characteristics of Individuals in Five HIV Molecular Networks in Georgia.MSM = Men who have sex with men. IDU = Injection drug use. SVI = Social Vulnerability Index (range: 0–1), matched to eHARS data by census tract at time of HIV…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Mental Health Research Topics
