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Objective: HIV molecular transmission network typologies have previously demonstrated associations to transmission risk; however, few studies have evaluated their predictive potential in anticipating future transmission events. To assess this, we tested multiple models on statewide surveillance data from the Florida Department of Health.
Design: This was a retrospective, observational cohort study examining the incidence of new HIV molecular linkages within the existing molecular network of persons with HIV (PWH) in Florida.
Methods: HIV-1 molecular transmission clusters were reconstructed for PWH diagnosed in Florida from 2006 to 2017 using the HIV-TRAnsmission Cluster Engine (HIV-TRACE). A suite of machine-learning models designed to predict linkage to a new diagnosis were internally and temporally externally validated using a variety of demographic, clinical, and network-derived parameters.
Results: Of the 9897 individuals who received a genotype within 12 months of diagnosis during 2012-2017, 2611 (26.4%) were molecularly linked to another case within 1 year at 1.5% genetic distance. The best performing model, trained on two years of data, was high performing (area under the receiving operating curve = 0.96, sensitivity = 0.91, and specificity = 0.90) and included the following variables: age group, exposure group, node degree, betweenness, transitivity, and neighborhood.
Conclusions: In the molecular network of HIV transmission in Florida, individuals' network position and connectivity predicted future molecular linkages. Machine-learned models using network typologies performed superior to models using individual data alone. These models can be used to more precisely identify subpopulations for intervention.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000003621 | DOI Listing |
Health Policy Plan
August 2025
Global Health 50/50.
Global health research can either challenge or reinforce power imbalances in knowledge production, funding, agenda-setting, authorship, data access, and capacity-building. These inequities are shaped by colonial legacies, funding disparities, extractive partnerships, and Global North dominance over Global South priorities. They manifest in research conduct, procedural ethics, and ethics-in-practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAsian J Psychiatr
September 2025
Dauten Family Center for Bipolar Treatment Innovation, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Debates over psychiatric diagnosis pivot on a tension between realism, which treats mental disorders as biologically grounded entities, and nominalism, which views them as human-defined categories. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) moved from early psychoanalytic typologies to structured, symptom-based criteria, yet robust biological markers remain elusive. The DSM-5 still relies on categorical diagnoses and therefore contends with high heterogeneity, frequent comorbidity, and blurred boundaries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMorphologie
August 2025
Department of Biological and Material Sciences in Dentistry, School of Dentistry, Faculty of Health, Witten/Herdecke University, Witten, Germany.
Introduction: The superficial musculoaponeurotic system (SMAS) is an acronym describing a facial subcutaneous anchored three-dimensional (3D) fibro-adipose-muscular tissue network connected to mimic muscles. SMAS transfers, distributes and reinforces mimic facial muscles contractions to the skin determining mimic expression and facial fold formation. The aim of this study was the histomorphological analysis of prenatal SMAS (pre-SMAS) development in analogy to the adult SMAS typology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNTM
August 2025
Institut für Geschichte der Medizin, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Deutschland.
This paper examines the role of Carl Gustav Carus within the emerging field of physical anthropology during the mid-nineteenth century. Despite his extensive connections with contemporary anthropologists, Carus's craniological approach was increasingly marginalized, ultimately excluding him from the foundational phase of German anthropology. Reconstructing Carus's craniological network from largely unpublished correspondence, this study presents four key aspects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCNS Spectr
August 2025
Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are involved in many physiological and pathophysiological processes. Conventional pharmacological models categorize the typology of pharmacologic ligands as agonists or antagonists. Biased agonism is a relatively newer pharmacodynamic characteristic that has potential to optimize therapeutic efficacy while minimizing adverse effects in psychiatric and neurological treatments.
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