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Sexual mixing and HIV transmission potential among Greek men who have sex with men: Results from SOPHOCLES
Abstract

HIV incidence among men who have sex with men (MSM) in Greece remains unchanged despite effective response to a recent outbreak among people who inject drugs (PWID). Network factors are increasingly understood to drive transmission in epidemics. The primary objective of the study was to characterize MSM in Greece, their sexual behaviors, and sexual network mixing patterns. We investigated the relationship between serostatus, sexual behaviors, and self-reported sex networks in a sample of MSM in Athens, Greece, generated using respondent driven sampling. We estimated mixing coefficients (r) based on survey-generated egonets. Additionally, multiple logistic regression was used to estimate adjusted odds ratios (AOR) and to assess relationships between serostatus, sexual behaviors, and sociodemographic indicators. A sample of 1,520 MSM participants included study respondents (n = 308) and their network members (n = 1,212). Mixing based on serostatus (r = 0.12, sigmar = 0.09-0.15) and condomless sex (r = 0.11, sigmar = 0.07-0.14) was random. However, mixing based on sex-drug use was highly assortative (r = 0.37, sigmar = 0.32-0.42). This study represents the first analysis of Greek MSM sexual networks. Our findings highlight protective behavior in two distinct network typologies. The first typology mixed assortatively based on serostatus and sex-drug use and was less likely to engage in condomless sex. The second typology mixed randomly based on condomless sex but was less likely to engage in sex-drug use. These findings support the potential benefit of HIV prevention program scale-up for this population including but not limited to PrEP.

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Full citation:
Bowman B, Psichogyiou M, Papadopoulou M, Sypsa V, Khanna A, Paraskevis D, Chanos S, Friedman SR, Hatzakis A, Schneider J (2021).
Sexual mixing and HIV transmission potential among Greek men who have sex with men: Results from SOPHOCLES
AIDS and Behavior, 25 (6), 1935-1945. doi: 10.1007/s10461-020-03123-6. PMCID: PMC8081711.