Surveillance of HIV
Infection (not AIDS)
This report includes data from case reports from 42 areas that had
laws or regulations requiring confidential reporting by name for adults
and adolescents and/or children with confirmed HIV infection (not AIDS),
in addition to the reporting of persons with AIDS. Connecticut required
reporting by name for children 13 years of age and younger. After the
removal of personal identifying information, data from these reports
were submitted to CDC (see Table 16 for list of areas). The
implementation of HIV reporting has differed from state to state. Before
1991, surveillance of HIV infection (not AIDS) was not standardized, and
the reporting of HIV infections (not AIDS) was based primarily on
passive surveillance. The information on many of the cases reported
before 1991 is not complete. Since then, CDC has assisted states in
conducting active surveillance of HIV infections (not AIDS) by the use
of standardized report forms and software.
Data on HIV infection (not AIDS) should be interpreted with caution.
HIV surveillance reports may not be representative of all persons
infected with HIV because not all infected persons have been tested.
Many HIV-reporting states offer anonymous HIV testing; the results of
anonymous tests are not reported to the confidential name-based HIV
registries of state and local health departments. Therefore, reports of
confidential test results may not represent all persons who tested
positive for HIV infection. Furthermore, many factors, including the
extent to which testing is routinely offered to specific groups and the
availability of, and access to, medical care and testing services, may
influence testing patterns. These data provide a minimum estimate of the
number of persons known to be HIV infected in states with confidential
HIV reporting.
As of December 31, 2004, 8 areas (California, Hawaii, Illinois,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Vermont, and the District of
Columbia) had implemented a code-based system to conduct case
surveillance for HIV infection (not AIDS). Other areas (Delaware, Maine,
Montana, Oregon, and Washington) had implemented a name-to-code system
for conducting HIV infection surveillance: initially, names are
collected, and, after any necessary public health follow-up, names are
converted to codes. Connecticut allows cases of HIV infection (not AIDS)
in adults and adolescents to be reported by name or code; New Hampshire
allows HIV cases to be reported with or without a name. Data on cases of
HIV infection (not AIDS) from these areas are not included in the HIV
data tables pending evaluations demonstrating acceptable performance
according to CDC guidelines and pending the development of methods for
reporting such data to CDC.
For this report, we classified cases in adults, adolescents, and
children 18 months of age and older by using the 2000 revised HIV
surveillance case definition, which incorporates positive test results
or reports of a detectable quantity of HIV nucleic acid or plasma HIV
RNA [1]. For children less than 18 months of age, the pediatric HIV
reporting criteria reflect diagnostic advances that permit the diagnosis
of HIV infection during the first months of life. By the use of HIV
nucleic acid detection tests, HIV infection can be detected in nearly
all infants aged 1 month and older. The timing of the HIV serologic and
HIV nucleic acid detection tests specified in the definitive and
presumptive criteria for HIV infection is based on the recommended
practices for diagnosing infection in children aged less than 18 months
and on evaluations of the performance of these tests for children in
this age group. Children aged less than 18 months born to an
HIV-infected mother are categorized as having been exposed perinatally
to HIV infection if the child does not meet the criteria for HIV
infection or the criteria for “not infected with HIV” [1,
2]. Children
born before 1994 were considered HIV infected if they met the HIV case
definition in the 1987 pediatric classification system for HIV infection
[3].
Because states initiated reporting on different dates, the length of
time reporting has been in place influences the number of HIV infection
cases reported. For example, data presented for a given year may include
cases reported during only a part of the year. Before statewide HIV
reporting, some states collected reports of HIV infection (not AIDS) in
selected populations. Therefore, these states have reports that precede
the initiation of statewide confidential reporting. A state with
confidential HIV infection reporting also may report persons who tested
positive in that state but who were residents of other states.
Therefore, when HIV data are presented by state of residence, cases
reported before a state initiated reporting may have been reported from
other states that did have confidential HIV infection reporting.
Over time, HIV infection may progress to AIDS and be reported to
surveillance. Persons with HIV infection (not AIDS) who are later
reported as having AIDS are deleted from the HIV infection (not AIDS)
tables and added to the AIDS tables. Persons with HIV infection may be
tested at any point on the clinical spectrum of disease; therefore, the
time between diagnosis of HIV infection and diagnosis of AIDS differs.
In addition, because surveillance practices differ, the reporting and
updating of persons’ clinical and vital status differ among states.
Completeness of reporting for HIV infection (not AIDS) is estimated at
more than 85% [4].
Surveillance of AIDS
All 50 states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. dependencies,
possessions, and associated nations report AIDS cases to CDC by using a
uniform surveillance case definition and case report form. The original
definition was modified in 1985 and 1987 [5,
6]. The case definition for
adults and adolescents was modified again in 1993 [7; see also
8]. The
revisions incorporated a broader range of AIDS-indicator diseases and
conditions and used HIV diagnostic tests to improve the sensitivity and
specificity of the definition. The laboratory and diagnostic criteria
for the 1987 pediatric case definition [3] were updated in 1994 [9].
Effective January 1, 2000, the surveillance case definition for HIV
infection was revised to reflect advances in laboratory HIV virologic
tests. The definition incorporates the reporting criteria for HIV
infection and AIDS into a single case definition for adults and children
[1].
For persons with laboratory-confirmed HIV infection, the 1987
revision incorporated encephalopathy, wasting syndrome, and other
indicator diseases that are diagnosed presumptively (i.e., without
confirmatory laboratory evidence of opportunistic infection). In
addition to the 23 clinical conditions in the 1987 definition, the 1993
case definition for adults and adolescents includes HIV infection among
persons with CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts of less than 200 cells/µL or a
CD4+ percentage of less than 14 and a diagnosis of pulmonary
tuberculosis, recurrent pneumonia, or invasive cervical cancer. For
adults, adolescents, and children 18 months of age and older, the 2000
revised HIV surveillance case definition incorporates positive test
results or reports of a detectable quantity of HIV nucleic acid or
plasma HIV RNA.
The pediatric case definition incorporates the revised 1994 pediatric
classification system for evidence of HIV infection. Cases among
children with their first positive results by Western blot or HIV
detection tests before October 1994 were categorized according to the
1987 classification system. For children of any age with an
AIDS-defining condition that requires evidence of HIV infection, a
single positive HIV virologic test result (i.e., HIV nucleic acid [DNA
or RNA], HIV viral culture, HIV p24 antigen) is sufficient for a
reportable AIDS diagnosis if the diagnosis is documented by a physician.
Although completeness of reporting of AIDS cases to state and local
health departments differs by geographic region and patient population,
studies conducted by state and local health departments indicate that
the reporting of AIDS cases in most areas of the United States is more
than 85% complete [10, 11,
12, 13]. In addition, multiple routes of exposure,
opportunistic infections diagnosed after the initial AIDS case report
was submitted to CDC, and vital status may not be determined or reported
for all cases. However, for persons reported as having AIDS, the
reporting of deaths is estimated to be more than 90% complete [14]. (See
Commentary for discussion of duplicates.)
Since January 1, 1994, CDC has not accepted AIDS case reports that
meet only the laboratory-based immunologic criteria of the 1993 expanded
surveillance case definition [7] if information on sex or race/ethnicity
was missing. A small number of cases previously reported to CDC without
those variables have been returned to the health departments for
follow-up and have been deleted from the totals.
Tabulation and Presentation of Data
Data in this report are provisional. This report includes information
received by CDC through June 30, 2005. For analyses of cases of HIV
infection, we used data from 35 areas (i.e., 33 states, Guam and the
U.S. Virgin Islands) that have had HIV infection reporting for a
sufficient time (i.e., at least since 2000) to allow for stabilization
of data collection and for adjustment of the data in order to monitor
trends.
This report is organized in 5 sections. In Sections 1–3 (i.e., Tables
1–12, Figure 1, and Maps 1 and 2), data have been statistically adjusted
to correct for delays in the reporting of cases and deaths; unreported
risk factors have been statistically redistributed to better present the
trends in the epidemic and the distribution of risk characteristics
among affected populations. To assess trends in cases, deaths, or
prevalence, it is preferable to use adjusted data, presented by year of
diagnosis instead of year of report. Section 4, which presents survival
data, is discussed later in the Technical Notes. In Section 5 (Tables
14–23), HIV and AIDS data are tabulated by date of report to CDC. Data
for the U.S. dependencies, possessions, and associated nations are
included in the table totals unless their exclusion is specified in a
footnote. The U.S. dependencies, possessions, and associated nations
comprise Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and
the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. The last 2 areas
constitute the category of Pacific Islands, U.S., as listed in this report.
Selection of areas with mature HIV reporting systems for analysis of
cases of HIV/AIDS and HIV infection (not AIDS)
The inclusion of areas with mature (i.e. since at least 2000)
confidential name-based HIV reporting for tabulation and presentation of
HIV/AIDS and HIV infection (not AIDS) data was based on the date of the
implementation of HIV reporting in the area and the ability to calculate
4 years of reporting delays in order to display trends reliably. For
this report, 35 areas with laws or regulations requiring confidential
name-based HIV infection reporting since 2000 were eligible for
inclusion. The 35 areas are Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas,
Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New
York, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South
Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia,
Wisconsin, Wyoming, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Selection of areas for analyses of reports of HIV infection (not
AIDS)
Areas included in tabulations for reports of HIV infection (not AIDS)
are based on the date of implementation of name-based HIV infection
reporting before the end of 2004. For Tables 16,
18, 20, and
22, we used
data from 42 areas to describe reports of cases of HIV infection (not
AIDS).
Age groups
For Tables 8-12 and Maps
1 and 2, age groups of persons living with
HIV/AIDS, HIV infection (not AIDS), or AIDS are based on the person’s
age as of December 31, 2004. For Table 7, age groups of persons who died
with AIDS are based on the person’s age at the time of death. For all
other tables, age groups are based on the person’s age at the first
documented positive HIV-antibody test result for persons with a
diagnosis of HIV infection (not AIDS), and age at diagnosis of AIDS for
persons with a diagnosis of AIDS. The age category for adults and
adolescents comprises persons age 13 years and older; the age category
for children comprises children younger than 13 years of age.
Race and ethnicity
In the Federal Register for October 30, 1997 [15], the Office of
Management and Budget announced the Standards for Maintaining,
Collecting, and Presenting Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity, also
known as Statistical Policy Directive 15. These standards, which
superseded the 1977 standards, reflected a change in federal policy
regarding the collection of race and ethnicity data; implementation by
January 1, 2003 was mandated. At a minimum, data on the following race
categories should be collected:
- American Indian or Alaska Native
- Asian
- black or African American
- Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
- white
Additionally, systems must be able to retain information when
multiple racial categories are reported. Two ethnicity categories should
be collected regardless of race:
Because data for this document were compiled from reports to CDC
through June 2005, race and ethnicity information were collected under 2
systems. The race and ethnicity categories in the system used through
December 2002 are maintained in this document because most case reports
were submitted under that system. Persons who reported multiple racial
categories or whose race was unknown are included in the total numbers
in Tables 1–5, 7–11, 13, and 19–23. Also, persons reported as
non-Hispanic may include persons whose ethnicity was not reported.
Tabulation of cases of HIV/AIDS and AIDS
In this report, the term HIV/AIDS is used to refer to 3 categories of
cases: (1) new diagnoses of HIV infection (not AIDS), (2) new diagnoses
of HIV infection with later diagnoses of AIDS, and (3) concurrent
diagnoses of HIV infection and AIDS. For analyses of HIV/AIDS data, we
used data from 35 areas (i.e., 33 states, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin
Islands) that have had HIV infection reporting for a sufficient length
of time (i.e., at least since 2000) to allow for stabilization of data
collection and for adjustment of the data in order to monitor trends.
Tables 1, 2, 8, and 9 summarize cases and prevalence of HIV/AIDS. For
analysis of AIDS cases, we used data from the 50 states, the District of
Columbia, U.S. territories and other associated nations.
Tabulation of persons living with HIV/AIDS, HIV infection (not AIDS),
and AIDS
Tabulation of persons living with HIV/AIDS, HIV infection (not AIDS),
or with AIDS (Tables 8–12 and Maps 1 and 2) are not actual counts of
cases reported to the surveillance system. The estimates are based on
reported cases which have been adjusted for delays in reporting of cases
and deaths.
Tabulation of deaths of persons with AIDS
Tabulation of deaths of persons with AIDS (Table 7) are not actual
counts of deaths reported to the surveillance system. The estimates are
based on reported deaths which have been adjusted for delays in
reporting.
Geographic designations
Regions of residence included in the report are defined as follows.
- Northeast: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont
- Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota,
Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin
- South: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina,
Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia
- West: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming
- U.S. dependencies, possessions, and associated nations: Guam, Puerto
Rico, the U.S. Pacific Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Metropolitan Statistical Areas
In the Federal Register for December 27, 2000, the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) published revised standards for defining
metropolitan statistical areas (MSA) for use in federal statistical
activities [16]. These standards provided for the identification of MSAs
in the United States and Puerto Rico and replaced and superseded the
1990 standards. The adoption of the new standards was effective as of
December 27, 2000. The OMB announced new MSA definitions based on the
new standards and Census 2000 data on June 6, 2003 [17]. Table 15
presents reported AIDS cases, by MSA, for areas with population ≥
500,000. MSAs for Table 15 are defined by the OMB according to their
most recent update of statistical areas in November 2004 [18].
Survival analyses
For the survival analyses presented in Section 4,
Table 13 and
Figures 2–4, we used time analysis methods for calculating survival
versus death for AIDS case data reported through June 30, 2004. Table 13
was limited to AIDS cases diagnosed in 2000, and Figures 2–4 were
limited to cases diagnosed during 1996–2003. Table 13 and the figures
were limited to deaths through December 2004; this was done to allow at
least 6 months for a death to be reported by June 30, 2005, and to allow
at least 1 month after AIDS diagnosis.
Transmission Categories
Transmission category is the term for the classification of cases
that summarizes a person’s possible HIV transmission risk factors; the
summary classification results from selecting, from the presumed
hierarchical order of probability, the one risk factor most likely to
have been responsible for transmission. For surveillance purposes, cases
of HIV/AIDS, HIV infection (not AIDS), and AIDS are counted only once in
the hierarchy of transmission categories. Persons with more than one
reported risk factor for HIV are classified in the transmission category
listed first in the hierarchy. The exception is men who report sexual
contact with other men and injection drug use; this group makes up a
separate transmission category.
Persons whose transmission category is classified as male-to-male
sexual contact include men who report sexual contact with other men
(i.e., homosexual contact) and men who report sexual contact with both
men and women (i.e., bisexual contact). Persons whose transmission
category is classified as heterosexual contact are persons who report
specific heterosexual contact with a person with, or at increased risk
for, HIV infection (e.g., an injection drug user).
Adults and adolescents born in, or who had sex with someone born in,
a country where heterosexual transmission was believed to be the
predominant mode of HIV transmission (formerly classified as Pattern II
countries by the World Health Organization) are no longer classified as
having heterosexually acquired HIV infection unless they meet the
criteria stated in the preceding paragraph. Similar to other cases in
persons who were reported without information about a behavioral or a
transfusion risk factor for HIV infection, these cases are classified
(in the absence of other risk factor information that would classify
them in another transmission category) as “no risk factor reported or
identified” [19]. Cases in children whose mother was born in, or whose
mother had sex with someone born in, Pattern II countries are now
classified (in the absence of other risk factor information that would
classify them in another transmission category) as “Mother with
documented HIV infection, a risk factor for HIV infection, or HIV
infection without a specified risk factor.”
Cases in persons with no reported exposure to HIV through any of the
routes listed in the hierarchy of transmission categories are classified
as “no risk reported or identified.” No identified risk factor (NIR)
cases include cases that have been followed up by local health
department officials; cases in persons whose exposure history is missing
because they died, declined to be interviewed, or were lost to
follow-up; and cases in persons who were interviewed or for whom other
follow-up information was available and no mode of exposure was
identified.
As of September 2000, the procedures for investigating cases reported
without risk factor information changed from ascertaining a risk factor
for all reported cases to estimating risk factor distributions from
statistical models and population-based samples. States continue to
investigate any report of an unusual exposure to HIV and report these
cases to CDC. CDC will continue to tabulate the number of documented
unusual exposures to HIV reported by the states.
Because recently reported cases of HIV infection or AIDS are more
likely to be reported without sufficient risk factor information, recent
AIDS incidence in some transmission categories will be underestimated
unless an adjustment is made. For tables and figures showing the
estimated cases of HIV infection (not AIDS) and AIDS, the adjustment of
cases without risk factor information among adults and adolescents is
based on the redistributions of transmission category, by specific sex,
race, and region, of cases that were diagnosed 3 to 10 years prior and
initially assigned to the “no identified risk factor” category but that
were later reclassified. Similar adjustments of such cases among
children are based on transmission-category redistribution of all cases
diagnosed during that period and later reclassified [20,
21].
Reporting Delays
Reporting delays (time between diagnosis of HIV infection or AIDS and
report to CDC) may differ among exposure, geographic, racial/ethnic,
age, sex, and vital status categories; for some AIDS cases, delays have
been as long as several years. Adjustments of the estimated data on HIV
infection (not AIDS) and on AIDS to account for reporting delays are
calculated by a maximum likelihood statistical procedure. This procedure
not only takes into account the differences in reporting delays among
exposure, geographic, racial/ethnic, age, sex, and vital status
categories, it is based on the assumption that reporting delays in these
categories have not changed over time [22,
23].
Rates
Rates per 100,000 population were calculated for the numbers of AIDS
cases in 2004, as well as for persons living with HIV infection (not
AIDS) at the end of 2004. Population denominators used to compute these
rates for the 50 states and the District of Columbia were based on
official postcensus estimates for 2004 from the U.S. Census Bureau [24]
and bridged-race estimates for 2003 obtained from the National Center
for Health Statistics [25]. The bridged estimates are based on the
Census 2000 counts and produced under a collaborative agreement with the U.S Census Bureau. These estimates result from bridging the 31 race
categories used in Census 2000, as specified in the 1997 Office of
Management and Budget standards [15] for the classification of data on
race and ethnicity, to the 4 race categories specified in the 1977
standards. Population denominators for U.S. dependencies, possessions,
and associated nations were based on official postcensus estimates and
Census 2000 counts from the U.S. Census Bureau’s International Database.
Each rate is calculated by dividing the number of cases reported during
the 12 months in 2004 (or the number of persons living with HIV
infection or with AIDS at the end of 2004) by the 2004 population,
multiplied by 100,000. The denominators used for computing age-, sex-,
and race-specific rates are computed by applying the age, sex, and race
proportions from the bridged-race population estimates for 2000 to the
2004 postcensus estimates of the total population for each state. When
bridged-race population denominators for the U.S. dependencies,
possessions, and associated nations were not available, proportions from
the U.S. Census Bureau’s International Database for 2000 were used to
estimate the age- and sex-specific subpopulations [26].
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