Mutated strains of HIV in Saskatchewan causing illness quicker: study
AMSTERDAM — Research suggests mutated strains of HIV circulating in Saskatchewan are leading to faster-developing AIDS-related illnesses among Indigenous people.
Physicians in the province are seeing cases where people have advanced very quickly from being relatively healthy to having an extremely compromised immune system.
“Instead of it taking years, sometimes it just takes a month or a year … and it’s much more aggressive than we would otherwise see,” said Dr. Alex Wong, an infectious disease physician with the Saskatchewan Health Authority.
The research from the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS and Simon Fraser University was presented at the 2018 AIDS conference in Amsterdam on Thursday. It shows that the strains of HIV in Saskatchewan have high levels of immune-resistant mutations compared with ones in other areas of Canada and the United States.

