Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
We retrospectively screened 1836 men who have sex with men (MSM) participating in the Amsterdam Cohort Studies (1984-2003) for hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies. HCV incidence was 0. 18/100 person-years (PY) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) -positive MSM (8/4408 PY 95% confidence interval CI, 0. 08-0. 36) but was 0/100 PY in MSM without HIV (0/7807 PY 95% CI, 0. 00-0. 05). After 2000, HCV incidence among HIV-positive men increased 10-fold to 0. 87/100 PY (5/572 PY 95% CI, 0. 28-2. 03). Additional hospital cases (n=34) showed that MSM in Amsterdam who acquired HCV infection after 2000 reported high rates of ulcerative sexually transmitted infections (59%) and rough sexual techniques (56%), denied injection drug use, and were infected mainly with the difficult-to-treat HCV genotypes 1 (56%) and 4 (36%). Phylogenetic analysis showed 3 monophyletic clusters of MSM-specific HCV strains. The emergence of an MSM-specific transmission network suggests that HIV-positive MSM with high-risk sexual behaviors are at risk for sexually acquired HCV. Targeted prevention and routine HCV screening among HIV-positive MSM is needed to deter the spread of HCV.
Laar et al. (Mon,) studied this question.