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HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report
Monday November 1, 1993
Suggested Citation:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. HIV/AIDS
Surveillance
Report, November 1993
Report Description
The U.S. AIDS case data presented below are extracted from the
"HIV/AIDS/ Survillance Report", published each quarter by the
Division of HIV/AIDS, Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333. In addition
to the data presented here, the printed report contains maps,
figures, and technical notes. Single copies of the printed
report are available from:
CDC National AIDS Clearinghouse
P.O. Box 6003
Rockville, MD 20849-6003
Table 1. AIDS cases and annual rates per 100,000 population, by
state, reported October 1991 through September 1992, October 1992
through September 1993;(1) and cumulative totals, by state and
age group, through September 1993,(2) United States
Oct. 1991- Oct. 1992-
Sept. 1992 Sep. 1993
State of residence No. Rate No. Rate
Alabama 465 11.4 705 17.0
Alaska 18 3.2 60 10.2
Arizona 408 10.9 1,202 31.3
Arkansas 237 10.0 420 17.5
California 8,641 28.4 17,474 56.4
Colorado 415 12.3 1,193 34.5
Connecticut 538 16.3 1,693 51.4
Delaware 126 18.5 346 49.9
District of Columbia 724 121.0 1,370 232.3
Florida 5,007 37.7 9,613 70.6
Georgia 1,348 20.4 2,597 38.4
Hawaii 175 15.4 324 27.9
Idaho 36 3.5 71 6.6
Illinois 1,842 16.0 3,005 25.8
Indiana 370 6.6 831 14.6
Iowa 86 3.1 196 7.0
Kansas 188 7.5 335 13.3
Kentucky 207 5.6 316 8.4
Louisiana 829 19.5 1,172 27.4
Maine 50 4.0 126 10.2
Maryland 1,096 22.6 2,353 47.6
Massachusetts 767 12.8 2,532 42.4
Michigan 784 8.4 1,752 18.6
Minnesota 237 5.3 624 13.9
Mississippi 231 8.9 468 17.9
Missouri 650 12.6 1,679 32.3
Montana 22 2.7 35 4.3
Nebraska 68 4.3 179 11.1
Nevada 235 18.3 601 44.0
New Hampshire 48 4.3 99 9.0
New Jersey 2,051 26.4 4,390 56.3
New Mexico 90 5.8 307 19.4
New York 8,232 45.6 16,031 88.4
North Carolina 648 9.6 1,059 15.5
North Dakota 4 0.6 4 0.6
Ohio 696 6.4 1,490 13.5
Oklahoma 228 7.2 716 22.3
Oregon 283 9.7 732 24.4
Pennsylvania 1,338 11.2 2,556 21.2
Rhode Island 102 10.2 305 30.3
South Carolina 347 9.7 1,395 38.4
South Dakota 8 1.1 23 3.2
Tennessee 442 8.9 967 19.2
Texas 2,944 17.0 7,164 40.4
Utah 145 8.2 270 14.9
Vermont 26 4.6 60 10.5
Virginia 606 9.6 1,590 24.9
Washington 573 11.4 1,459 28.2
West Virginia 61 3.4 78 4.3
Wisconsin 224 4.5 700 13.9
Wyoming 4 0.9 36 7.7
Subtotal 44,900 17.8 94,703 37.0
Guam 1 0.7 2 1.5
Pacific Islands, U.S. - - - -
Puerto Rico 1,796 50.5 2,621 73.1
Virgin Islands, U.S. 19 18.6 42 40.8
Total 46,716 18.2 97,368 37.5
Cumulative totals
Adults/ Children
adolescents < 13 years old Total
Alabama 2,275 43 2,318
Alaska 154 2 156
Arizona 3,059 14 3,073
Arkansas 1,239 21 1,260
California 62,201 356 62,557
Colorado 3,516 18 3,534
Connecticu 4,415 98 4,513
Delaware 830 7 837
District of Columbia 5,231 78 5,309
Florida 32,008 751 32,759
Georgia 9,255 87 9,342
Hawaii 1,250 10 1,260
Idaho 203 2 205
Illinois 10,522 140 10,662
Indiana 2,443 17 2,460
Iowa 577 6 583
Kansas 1,031 5 1,036
Kentucky 1,148 13 1,161
Louisiana 4,811 67 4,878
Maine 427 4 431
Maryland 7,187 152 7,339
Massachusetts 7,238 132 7,370
Michigan 4,904 62 4,966
Minnesota 1,829 13 1,842
Mississippi 1,483 20 1,503
Missouri 4,626 33 4,659
Montana 134 2 136
Nebraska 469 4 473
Nevada 1,641 15 1,656
New Hampshire 368 6 374
New Jersey 18,106 423 18,529
New Mexico 831 2 833
New York 63,660 1,321 64,981
North Carolina 3,735 75 3,810
North Dakota 32 - 32
Ohio 4,944 68 5,012
Oklahoma 1,795 15 1,810
Oregon 2,233 9 2,242
Pennsylvania 9,086 120 9,206
Rhode Island 842 9 851
South Carolina 3,022 38 3,060
South Dakota 57 2 59
Tennessee 2,734 26 2,760
Texas 23,572 213 23,785
Utah 818 20 838
Vermont 176 2 178
Virginia 4,710 82 4,792
Washington 4,765 18 4,783
West Virginia 359 5 364
Wisconsin 1,705 19 1,724
Wyoming 91 - 91
Subtotal 323,747 4,645 328,392
Guam 12 - 12
Pacific Islands, U.S 2 - 2
Puerto Rico 10,436 256 10,692
Virgin Islands, U.S. 147 5 152
Total 334,344 4,906 339,250
(1) Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance case definition for adults and adolescents.
(2) During the third quarter of 1993, CDC received reports of
23,664 cases and 9,951 deaths among adults/adolescents and 196
cases and 105 deaths among children.
Table 2. AIDS cases and annual rates per 100,000 population, by
metropolitan area with 500,000 or more population, reported
October 1991 through September 1992, October 1992 through
September 1993(1) and cumulative totals, by area and age group,
through September 1993, United States
Oct. 1991- Oct. 1992-
Sept. 1992 Sept. 1993
Metropolitan
area of residence(2) No. Rate No. Rate
Akron, Ohio 36 5.4 46 6.9
Albany-Schenectady, N.Y. 106 12.2 217 24.7
Albuquerque, N.M. 58 9.6 186 30.2
Allentown, Pa. 32 5.3 122 20.0
Ann Arbor, Mich. 29 5.8 63 12.4
Atlanta, Ga. 956 31.3 1,773 56.4
Austin, Tex. 241 27.6 586 65.0
Bakersfield, Calif. 50 8.8 161 27.3
Baltimore, Md. 669 27.7 1,628 66.6
Baton Rouge, La. 92 17.1 135 24.7
Bergen-Passaic, N.J. 267 20.9 677 52.8
Birmingham, Ala. 116 13.7 259 30.2
Boston, Mass. 659 11.6 2,268 40.2
Buffalo, N.Y. 69 5.8 198 16.5
Charleston, S.C. 70 13.4 259 47.9
Charlotte, N.C. 118 9.9 245 20.1
Chicago, Ill. 1,614 21.5 2,619 34.5
Cincinnati, Ohio 112 7.3 230 14.7
Cleveland, Ohio 199 9.0 458 20.6
Columbus, Ohio 158 11.5 336 24.1
Dallas, Tex. 759 27.7 1,805 64.4
Dayton, Ohio 67 7.0 132 13.7
Denver, Colo. 335 20.1 1,010 58.9
Detroit, Mich. 606 14.1 1,233 28.7
El Paso, Tex. 46 7.5 116 18.3
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 848 65.9 1,165 88.4
Fort Worth, Tex. 160 11.5 404 28.2
Fresno, Calif. 99 12.7 173 21.5
Gary, Ind. 47 7.7 78 12.6
Grand Rapids, Mich. 37 3.9 126 13.0
Greensboro, N.C. 128 12.0 151 14.0
Greenville, S.C. 62 7.4 255 29.8
Harrisburg, Pa. 46 7.7 78 12.9
Hartford, Conn. 167 14.8 565 50.2
Honolulu, Hawaii 124 14.6 256 29.6
Houston, Tex. 1,023 29.8 2,587 72.8
Indianapolis, Ind. 170 12.1 397 27.7
Jacksonville, Fla. 327 35.0 910 94.7
Jersey City, N.J. 313 56.6 619 111.8
Kansas City, Mo. 314 19.6 736 45.4
Knoxville, Tenn. 35 5.8 78 12.7
Las Vegas, Nev. 180 19.5 468 46.9
Little Rock, Ark. 82 15.8 171 32.6
Los Angeles, Calif. 3,327 37.1 5,557 61.1
Louisville, Ky. 90 9.4 166 17.2
Memphis, Tenn. 174 17.1 414 40.1
Miami, Fla. 1,324 67.0 2,423 120.1
Middlesex, N.J. 217 21.1 354 34.2
Milwaukee, Wis. 127 8.8 361 24.8
Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Min. 204 7.9 550 20.9
Monmouth-Ocean City, N.J. 111 11.1 366 36.4
Nashville, Tenn. 125 12.5 269 26.3
Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y. 370 14.1 1,010 38.4
New Haven, Conn. 318 19.5 987 60.4
New Orleans, La. 476 36.8 612 46.9
New York, N.Y. 7,163 83.8 13,288 155.3
Newark, N.J. 838 43.8 1,540 80.6
Norfolk, Va. 105 7.2 325 21.9
Oakland, Calif. 563 26.7 1,225 57.2
Oklahoma City, Okla. 113 11.6 310 31.5
Omaha, Neb. 49 7.5 136 20.6
Orange County, Calif. 553 22.6 717 29.0
Orlando, Fla. 331 26.1 870 66.3
Philadelphia, Pa. 1,005 20.3 2,110 42.5
Phoenix, Ariz. 292 12.8 863 36.9
Pittsburgh, Pa. 148 6.2 214 8.9
Portland, Oreg. 249 15.9 655 40.3
Providence, R.I. 96 10.5 285 31.1
Raleigh-Durham, N.C. 128 14.5 189 20.8
Richmond, Va. 140 15.9 385 42.9
Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif. 435 16.0 1,045 36.6
Rochester, N.Y. 76 7.1 243 22.4
Sacramento, Calif. 287 20.7 453 31.5
Saint Louis, Mo. 290 11.6 841 33.3
Salt Lake City, Utah 129 11.7 241 21.3
San Antonio, Tex. 217 16.1 426 31.1
San Diego, Calif. 631 24.8 1,474 56.7
San Francisco, Calif. 1,896 116.9 4,592 279.8
San Jose, Calif. 183 12.2 502 33.2
San Juan, P.R. 1,075 57.9 1,638 87.3
Sarasota, Fla. 90 18.0 148 28.9
Scranton, Pa. 26 4.1 54 8.4
Seattle, Wash. 424 20.4 1,043 49.1
Springfield, Mass. 92 15.3 210 35.0
Stockton, Calif. 34 6.9 109 21.6
Syracuse, N.Y. 71 9.5 168 22.2
Tacoma, Wash. 38 6.3 137 21.9
Tampa-Saint Petersburg, Fla. 535 25.5 1,421 66.6
Toledo, Ohio 33 5.4 90 14.6
Tucson, Ariz. 93 13.7 258 37.6
Tulsa, Okla. 70 9.7 236 32.1
Ventura, Calif. 73 10.8 130 19.0
Washington, D.C. 1,345 31.3 2,560 58.7
West Palm Beach, Fla. 529 59.7 787 86.5
Wichita, Kansas 62 12.6 96 19.2
Wilmington, Del. 93 17.8 261 49.1
Youngstown, Ohio 23 3.8 29 4.8
Metropolitan areas with 500,000 or more population
39,112 24.8 81,352 50.9
Metropolitan areas with 50,000 to 500,000 population
4,821 10.5 10,306 22.0
Non-metropolitan areas 2,587 4.9 5,288 10.0
Total (3) 46,716 18.2 97,368 37.5
Cumulative totals
Adults/ Children
Area of residence(2) adolescents <13 years old Total
Akron, Ohio 214 - 214
Albany-Schenectady, N.Y. 672 14 686
Albuquerque, N.M. 490 1 491
Allentown, Pa. 314 4 318
Ann Arbor, Mich. 194 4 198
Atlanta, Ga. 6,836 43 6,879
Austin, Tex. 1,705 14 1,719
Bakersfield, Calif. 357 3 360
Baltimore, Md. 4,548 113 4,661
Baton Rouge, La. 469 7 476
Bergen-Passaic, N.J. 2,425 51 2,476
Birmingham, Ala. 716 11 727
Boston, Mass. 6,510 117 6,627
Buffalo, N.Y. 653 8 661
Charleston, S.C. 611 5 616
Charlotte, N.C. 747 10 757
Chicago, Ill. 9,251 125 9,376
Cincinnati, Ohio 768 11 779
Cleveland, Ohio 1,414 27 1,441
Columbus, Ohio 1,085 6 1,091
Dallas, Tex. 5,867 24 5,891
Dayton, Ohio 481 8 489
Denver, Colo. 2,918 13 2,931
Detroit, Mich. 3,484 45 3,529
El Paso, Tex. 303 1 304
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 5,114 109 5,223
Fort Worth, Tex. 1,350 15 1,365
Fresno, Calif. 519 4 523
Gary, Ind. 240 2 242
Grand Rapids, Mich. 326 3 329
Greensboro, N.C. 631 11 642
Greenville, S.C. 521 2 523
Harrisburg, Pa. 313 6 319
Hartford, Conn. 1,397 17 1,414
Honolulu, Hawaii 946 6 952
Houston, Tex. 9,225 87 9,312
Indianapolis, Ind. 1,178 5 1,183
Jacksonville, Fla. 2,140 49 2,189
Jersey City, N.J. 2,933 68 3,001
Kansas City, Mo. 2,197 9 2,206
Knoxville, Tenn. 238 2 240
Las Vegas, Nev. 1,260 14 1,274
Little Rock, Ark. 485 9 494
Los Angeles, Calif. 21,704 146 21,850
Louisville, Ky. 509 8 517
Memphis, Tenn. 1,007 9 1,016
Miami, Fla. 9,303 260 9,563
Middlesex, N.J. 1,515 33 1,548
Milwaukee, Wis. 914 12 926
Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minn. 1,619 10 1,629
Monmouth-Ocean City, N.J. 1,253 35 1,288
Nashville, Tenn. 844 10 854
Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y. 3,200 66 3,266
New Haven, Conn. 2,654 77 2,731
New Orleans, La. 2,868 37 2,905
New York, N.Y. 54,716 1,183 55,899
Newark, N.J. 7,229 184 7,413
Norfolk, Va. 1,006 22 1,028
Oakland, Calif. 4,138 26 4,164
Oklahoma City, Okla. 825 1 826
Omaha, Neb. 343 1 344
Orange County, Calif. 2,811 21 2,832
Orlando, Fla. 2,249 42 2,291
Philadelphia, Pa. 7,082 87 7,169
Phoenix, Ariz. 2,236 9 2,245
Pittsburgh, Pa. 1,026 6 1,032
Portland, Oreg. 943 6 1,949
Providence, R.I. 791 8 799
Raleigh-Durham, N.C. 787 18 805
Richmond, Va. 1,006 13 1,019
Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif. 2,727 27 2,754
Rochester, N.Y. 742 8 750
Sacramento, Calif. 1,490 14 1,504
Saint Louis, Mo. 2,224 21 2,245
Salt Lake City, Utah 726 14 740
San Antonio, Tex. 1,591 14 1,605
San Diego, Calif. 4,877 32 4,909
San Francisco, Calif. 17,397 27 17,424
San Jose, Calif. 1,514 11 1,525
San Juan, P.R. 6,577 168 6,745
Sarasota, Fla. 570 12 582
Scranton, Pa. 188 3 191
Seattle, Wash. 3,536 10 3,546
Springfield, Mass. 574 15 589
Stockton, Calif. 307 8 315
Syracuse, N.Y. 497 6 503
Tacoma, Wash. 360 7 367
Tampa-Saint Petersburg, Fla. 3,781 53 3,834
Toledo, Ohio 271 4 275
Tucson, Ariz. 619 5 624
Tulsa, Okla. 549 5 554
Ventura, Calif. 378 1 379
Washington, D.C. 9,366 138 9,504
West Palm Beach, Fla. 2,916 107 3,023
Wichita, Kansas 276 2 278
Wilmington, Del. 617 6 623
Youngstown, Ohio 148 - 148
Metropolitan areas with 500,000 or more population
284,441 4,131 288,572
Metropolitan areas with 50,000 - 500,000 population
31,977 485 32,462
Non-metropolitan areas 16,621 268 16,889
Total (3) 334,344 4,906 339,250
1 Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance
case definition for adults and adolescents.
2 Based on Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA) revised June
1993.
3 Totals include 1,327 persons whose area of residence is
unknown.
Table 3. AIDS cases by age group, exposure category, and sex,
reported October 1991 through September 1992, October 1992
through September 1993;(1) and cumulative totals, by age group
and exposure category, through September 1993, United States
Males
Oct. 1991- Oct. 1992-
Sept. 1992 Sept. 1993
Adult/adolescent
exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 24,334 (61) 46,025 (56)
Injecting drug use 8,621 (22) 19,142 (23)
Men who have sex with men and inject drugs
2,638 (7) 5,353 (7)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 317 (1) 990 (1)
Heterosexual contact: 1,613 (4) 3,328 (4)
Sex with injecting drug user 703 1,102
Sex with bisexual male - -
Sex with person with hemophilia 3 10
Born in Pattern-II(3) country 271 607
Sex with person born in Pattern-II country
14 43
Sex with transfusion recipient with HIV infection
18 59
Sex with HIV-infected person, risk not specified
604 1,507
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue(4)
385 (1) 695 (1)
Other/risk not identified(5) 1,925 ( 5) 6,174 ( 8)
Adult/adolescent subtotal 39,833 (100) 81,707 (100)
Pediatric (< 13 years old)
exposure category
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 23 (6) 18 (4)
Mother with/at risk for HIV infection:
329 (89) 397 (91)
Injecting drug use 114 126
Sex with injecting drug user 54 68
Sex with bisexual male 7 5
Sex with person with hemophilia 5 1
Born in Pattern-II country 19 22
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 3 3
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 1 1
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 31 45
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 12 16
Has HIV infection,
risk not specified 83 110
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue
12 (3) 15 (3)
Risk not identified 5 (1) 7 (2)
Pediatric subtotal 369 (100) 437 (100)
Total 40,202 82,144
Females
Oct. 1991- Oct. 1992-
Sept. 1992 Sept. 1993
Adult/adolescent
exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men - -
Injecting drug use 2,815 (46) 6,891 (47)
Men who have sex with men and inject drugs
- -
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 6 ( 0) 27 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 2,588 (42) 5,545 (37)
Sex with injecting drug user 1,474 2,474
Sex with bisexual male 177 423
Sex with person with hemophilia 20 61
Born in Pattern-II(3) country 165 324
Sex with person born in Pattern-II country
15 31
Sex with transfusion recipient with HIV infection
49 101
Sex with HIV-infected person, risk not specified
688 2,131
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue(4)
278 ( 5) 496 ( 3)
Other/risk not identified(5) 466 ( 8) 1,833 (12)
Adult/adolescent subtotal 6,153 (100) 14,792 (100)
Pediatric (< 13 years old)
exposure category
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder - -
Mother with/at risk for HIV infection: 347 (96) 417 (97)
Injecting drug use 144 138
Sex with injecting drug user 62 65
Sex with bisexual male 8 4
Sex with person with hemophilia 2 2
Born in Pattern-II country 12 15
Sex with person born in Pattern-II country
2 2
Sex with transfusion recipient with HIV infection
3 2
Sex with HIV-infected person, risk not specified
21 51
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue
10 7
Has HIV infection, risk not specified
83 131
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue
6 ( 2) 9 (2)
Risk not identified 8 ( 2) 6 (1)
Pediatric subtotal 361 (100) 432 (100)
Total 6,514 15,224
Totals
Oct. 1991- Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1992 Sept. 1993 total 2
Adult/adolescent
exposure category No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men
24,334 (53) 46,025 (48) 183,344 (55)
Injecting drug use 11,436 (25) 26,033 (27) 80,713 (24)
Men who have sex with men and inject drugs
2,638 ( 6) 5,353 ( 6) 21,142 (6)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder
323 ( 1) 1,017 ( 1) 2,963 (1)
Heterosexual contact:
4,201 ( 9) 8,873 ( 9) 24,358 (7)
Sex with injecting drug user
2,177 3,576 11,750
Sex with bisexual male
177 423 1,250
Sex with person with hemophilia
23 71 193
Born in Pattern-II(3) country
436 931 3,758
Sex with person born in Pattern-II country
29 74 279
Sex with transfusion recipient with HIV infection
67 160 456
Sex with HIV-infected person, risk not specified
1,292 3,638 6,672
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue(4)
663 ( 1) 1,191 ( 1) 5,984 (2)
Other/risk not identified(5)
2,391 ( 5) 8,007 ( 8) 15,840 (5)
Adult/adolescent subtotal
45,986 (100) 96,499 (100) 334,344 (100)
Pediatric (< 13 years old)
exposure category
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 23 ( 3) 18 ( 2) 202 (4)
Mother with/at risk for HIV infection:
676 (93) 814 (94) 4,328 (88)
Injecting drug user 258 264 1,920
Sex with injecting drug user 116 133 846
Sex with bisexual male 15 9 88
Sex with person with hemophilia 7 3 21
Born in Pattern-II country 31 37 305
Sex with person born in Pattern-II country
5 5 23
Sex with transfusion recipient with HIV infection
4 3 19
Sex with HIV-infected person, risk not specified
52 96 275
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue
22 23 98
Has HIV infection, risk not specified
166 241 733
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue
18(2) 24(3) 327(7)
Risk not identified 13(2) 13(1) 49(1)
Pediatric subtotal 730(100) 869(100) 4,906(100)
Total 46,716 97,368 339,250
1 Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance case definition for adults and adolescents.
2 Includes 7 persons known to be infected with human
immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2). See JAMA 1992;267:2775-9.
3 See technical notes.
4 Twenty-seven adults/adolescents and 2 children developed AIDS
after receiving blood screened negative for HIV antibody. Six
additional adults developed AIDS after receiving tissue or organs
from HIV-infected donors. Three of the 6 received tissues or
organs from a donor who was negative for HIV antibody at the time
of donation. See N Engl J Med 1992;326:726-32.
5 "Other" refers to 11 health-care workers who developed AIDS
after occupational exposure to HIV-infected blood, as documented
by evidence of seroconversion; to 4 patients who developed AIDS
after exposure to HIV within the health-care setting, as
documented by laboratory studies; to 1 person who acquired HIV
infection perinatally and was diagnosed with AIDS after age 13;
and to 1 person with intentional self-inoculation of blood from
an HIV-infected person. "Risk not identified" refers to persons
whose mode of exposure to HIV is unknown. This includes persons
under investigation; persons who died, were lost to follow-up, or
declined interview; and persons whose mode of exposure to HIV
remains unidentified after investigation.
Table 4. Male adult/adolescent AIDS cases by exposure category
and race/ethnicity, reported October 1992 through September
1993,(1) and cumulative totals, through September 1993, United
States
White, not
Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 30,094 (73) 125,392 (78)
Injecting drug use 4,285 (10) 12,670 ( 8)
Men who have sex with men
and inject drugs 3,001 ( 7) 11,959 ( 7)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 794 ( 2) 2,349 ( 1)
Heterosexual contact: 607 ( 1) 1,654 ( 1)
Sex with injecting drug user 227 804
Sex with person with hemophilia 6 13
Born in Pattern-II(2) country 1 8
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 10 52
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 25 72
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 338 705
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 431 ( 1) 2,519 ( 2)
Risk not identified(3) 2,032 ( 5) 4,380 ( 3)
Total 41,244 (100) 160,923 (100)
Black, not Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 9,614 (37) 34,166 (42)
Injecting drug use 9,667 (37) 29,762 (36)
Men who have sex with men and inject drugs
1,568 ( 6) 5,974 ( 7)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 110 ( 0) 260 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 2,125 ( 8) 6,279 ( 8)
Sex with injecting drug user 682 2,118
Sex with person with hemophilia 1 4
Born in Pattern-II(2) country 605 2,571
Sex with person born in Pattern-II country
31 86
Sex with transfusion recipient with HIV infection
26 51
Sex with HIV-infected person, risk not specified
780 1,449
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue
157 ( 1) 606 ( 1)
Risk not identified(3) 2,807 (11) 5,127 ( 6)
Total 26,048 (100) 82,174 (100)
Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 5,638 (42) 21,475 (45)
Injecting drug use 5,094 (38) 18,143 (38)
Men who have sex with men and inject drugs
712 ( 5) 3,021 ( 6)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 68 ( 1) 224 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 570 ( 4) 1,375 ( 3)
Sex with injecting drug user 185 599
Sex with person with hemophilia 2 4
Born in Pattern-II(2) country - 10
Sex with person born in Pattern-II country
2 11
Sex with transfusion recipient with HIV infection
6 28
Sex with HIV-infected person, risk not specified
375 723
Receipt of blood transfusion, blood components, or tissue
91 ( 1) 385 ( 1)
Risk not identified(3) 1,234 ( 9) 2,728 ( 6)
Total 13,407 (100) 47,351 (100)
Asian/Pacific Islander
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 445 (74) 1,583 (79)
Injecting drug use 28 ( 5) 79 ( 4)
Men who have sex with men and inject drugs
22 ( 4) 57 ( 3)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 12 ( 2) 35 ( 2)
Heterosexual contact: 15 ( 2) 29 ( 1)
Sex with injecting drug user 6 12
Sex with person with hemophilia - -
Born in Pattern-II country - 3
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - 1
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 2 2
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 7 11
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 12 ( 2) 72 ( 4)
Risk not identified 69 (11) 152 ( 8)
Total 603 (100) 2,007 (100)
American Indian/ Alaska Native
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 158 (63) 388 (63)
Injecting drug use 23 ( 9) 62 (10)
Men who have sex with men and inject drugs
42 (17) 107 (17)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 6 ( 2) 16 ( 3)
Heterosexual contact: 4 ( 2) 10 ( 2)
Sex with injecting drug user 1 5
Sex with person with hemophilia - -
Born in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection - -
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 3 5
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 1 ( 0) 5 ( 1)
Risk not identified 15 ( 6) 26 ( 4)
Total 249 (100) 614 (100)
Cumulative totals(4)
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 46,025 (56) 183,344 (62)
Injecting drug use 19,142 (23) 60,835 (21)
Men who have sex with men
and inject drugs 5,353 ( 7) 21,142 ( 7)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 990 ( 1) 2,890 ( 1)
Heterosexual contact: 3,328 ( 4) 9,361 ( 3)
Sex with injecting drug user 1,102 3,539
Sex with person with hemophilia 10 22
Born in Pattern-II country 607 2,597
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 43 150
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 59 154
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 1,507 2,899
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 695 ( 1) 3,596 ( 1)
Risk not identified 6,174 ( 8) 12,474 ( 4)
Total 81,707 (100) 293,642 (100)
1 Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance case definition for adults and adolescents.
2 See technical notes.
3 "Risk not identified" refers to persons whose mode of exposure
to HIV is unknown. This includes persons under investigation;
persons who died, were lost to follow-up, or declined interview;
and persons whose mode of exposure to HIV remains unidentified
after investigation.
4 Includes 573 men whose race/ethnicity is unknown.
Table 5. Female adult/adolescent AIDS cases by exposure category
and race/ethnicity, reported October 1992 through September
1993,(1) and cumulative totals, through September 1993, United
States White, not Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Injecting drug use 1,718 (46) 4,459 (43)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 14 ( 0) 48 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 1,387 (37) 3,595 (35)
Sex with injecting drug user 586 1,703
Sex with bisexual male 199 627
Sex with person with hemophilia 50 140
Born in Pattern-II(2) country 3 5
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 4 15
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 49 176
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 496 929
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 223 ( 6) 1,398 (14)
Risk not identified(3) 398 (11) 793 ( 8)
Total 3,740 (100) 10,293 (100)
Black, not Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Injecting drug use 3,861 (48) 11,386 (52)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 7 ( 0) 15 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 2,884 (36) 7,864 (36)
Sex with injecting drug user 1,191 4,101
Sex with bisexual male 150 428
Sex with person with hemophilia 9 21
Born in Pattern-II(2) country 316 1,143
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 26 110
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 27 63
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 1,165 1,998
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 167 ( 2) 571 ( 3)
Risk not identified(3) 1,089 (14) 1,892 ( 9)
Total 8,008 (100) 21,728 (100)
Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Injecting drug use 1,265 (44) 3,907 (47)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 5 ( 0) 9 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 1,192 (41) 3,377 (41)
Sex with injecting drug user 667 2,337
Sex with bisexual male 60 162
Sex with person with hemophilia 1 7
Born in Pattern-II(2) country 4 11
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 1 4
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 17 51
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 442 805
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 88 ( 3) 349 ( 4)
Risk not identified(3) 327 (11) 631 ( 8)
Total 2,877 (100) 8,273 (100)
Asian/Pacific Islander
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Injecting drug use 15 (15) 34 (15)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 1 ( 1) 1 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 57 (58) 104 (45)
Sex with injecting drug user 15 31
Sex with bisexual male 13 28
Sex with person with hemophilia - 2
Born in Pattern-II country 1 1
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 8 11
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 20 31
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 16 (16) 59 (26)
Risk not identified 10 (10) 32 (14)
Total 99 (100) 230 (100)
American Indian/ Alaska Native
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Injecting drug use 17 (37) 52 (50)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder - -
Heterosexual contact: 20 (43) 32 (31)
Sex with injecting drug user 12 21
Sex with bisexual male 1 3
Sex with person with hemophilia 1 1
Born in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection - -
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 6 7
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 2 ( 4) 8 ( 8)
Risk not identified 7 (15) 11 (11)
Total 46 (100) 103 (100)
Cumulative totals(4)
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Injecting drug use 6,891 (47) 19,878 (49)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 27 ( 0) 73 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 5,545 (37) 14,997 (37)
Sex with injecting drug user 2,474 8,211
Sex with bisexual male 423 1,250
Sex with person with hemophilia 61 171
Born in Pattern-II country 324 1,161
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 31 129
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 101 302
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 2,131 3,773
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 496 ( 3) 2,388 ( 6)
Risk not identified 1,833 (12) 3,366 ( 8)
Total 14,792 (100) 40,702 (100)
1 Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance case definition for adults and adolescents.
2 See technical notes.
3 "Risk not identified" refers to persons whose mode of exposure
to HIV is unknown. This includes persons under investigation;
persons who died, were lost to follow-up, or declined interview;
and persons whose mode of exposure to HIV remains unidentified
after investigation.
4 Includes 75 women whose race/ethnicity is unknown.
Table 6. Pediatric AIDS cases by exposure category and race/
ethnicity, reported October 1992 through September 1993, and
cumulative totals, through September 1993, United States
White, not Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 13 ( 9) 141 (14)
Mother with/at risk for HIV
infection: 118 (84) 663 (68)
Injecting drug use 38 290
Sex with injecting drug user 22 132
Sex with bisexual male 4 39
Sex with person with hemophilia 2 13
Born in Pattern-II1 country - 3
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 1 6
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 10 45
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 6 29
Has HIV infection,
risk not specified 35 106
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 9 ( 6) 167 (17)
Risk not identified(2) 1 ( 1) 9 ( 1)
Total 141 (100) 980 (100)
Black, not Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 1 ( 0) 24 (1)
Mother with/at risk for HIV
infection: 489 (97) 2,556 (95)
Injecting drug use 153 1,133
Sex with injecting drug user 70 390
Sex with bisexual male 2 28
Sex with person with hemophilia - 5
Born in Pattern-II1 country 37 300
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 5 22
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 1 5
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 57 148
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 12 43
Has HIV infection,
risk not specified 152 482
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 6 ( 1) 74 (3)
Risk not identified(2) 8 ( 2) 29 (1)
Total 504 (100) 2,683(100)
Hispanic
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 4 ( 2) 33 ( 3)
Mother with/at risk for HIV
infection: 197 (93) 1,074 (90)
Injecting drug use 69 483
Sex with injecting drug user 40 318
Sex with bisexual male 3 20
Sex with person with hemophilia 1 3
Born in Pattern-II(1) country - 2
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - 1
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 1 8
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 27 77
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 5 25
Has HIV infection,
risk not specified 51 137
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 7 ( 3) 76 ( 6)
Risk not identified(2) 4 ( 2) 11 ( 1)
Total 212 (100) 1,194 (100)
Asian/Pacific Islander
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder - 3 (14)
Mother with/at risk for HIV
infection: 2 (50) 10 (45)
Injecting drug use 1 3
Sex with injecting drug user - 2
Sex with bisexual male - 1
Sex with person with hemophilia - -
Born in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection - -
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 1 1
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue - 1
Has HIV infection,
risk not specified - 2
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 2 (50) 9 (41)
Risk not identified - -
Total 4 (100) 22 (100)
American Indian/ Alaska Native
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder - 1 ( 7)
Mother with/at risk for HIV
infection: 2 (100) 13 (93)
Injecting drug use 1 6
Sex with injecting drug user 1 2
Sex with bisexual male - -
Sex with person with hemophilia - -
Born in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - -
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection - -
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified - 2
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue - -
Has HIV infection,
risk not specified - 3
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue - -
Risk not identified - -
Total 2 (100) 14 (100)
Cumulative totals(3)
Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1993 total
Exposure category No. (%) No. (%)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 18 ( 2) 202 ( 4)
Mother with/at risk for HIV
infection: 814 (94) 4,328 (88)
Injecting drug use 264 1,920
Sex with injecting drug user 133 846
Sex with bisexual male 9 88
Sex with person with hemophilia 3 21
Born in Pattern-II country 37 305
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country 5 23
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 3 19
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 96 275
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 23 98
Has HIV infection,
risk not specified 241 733
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 24 ( 3) 327 ( 7)
Risk not identified 13 ( 1) 49 ( 1)
Total 869 (100) 4,906 (100)
1 See technical notes.
2 "Risk not identified" refers to persons whose mode of exposure
to HIV is unknown. This includes persons under investigation;
ersons who died, were lost to follow-up, or declined interview;
and persons whose mode of exposure to HIV remains unidentified
after investigation.
3 Includes 13 children whose race/ethnicity is unknown.
Table 7. AIDS cases in adolescents and adults under age 25, by
sex and exposure category, reported October 1991 through
September 1992, October 1992 through September 1993,(1) and
cumulative totals through September 1993, United States
13-19 years old
Oct. 1991- Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1992 Sept. 1993 total
Male
exposure category No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 36 (35) 91 (28) 319 (33)
Injecting drug use 4 ( 4) 14 ( 4) 62 ( 6)
Men who have sex with men
and inject drugs 5 ( 5) 8 ( 2) 45 ( 5)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 47 (46) 172 (52) 440 (45)
Heterosexual contact: 3 ( 3) 13 ( 4) 29 ( 3)
Sex with injecting drug user 1 6 11
Sex with person with
hemophilia - 1 1
Born in Pattern-II(2)
country - 1 8
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - - 1
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection - - -
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 2 5 8
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 5 ( 5) 12 ( 4) 42 ( 4)
Risk not identified(3) 2 ( 2) 19 ( 6) 40 ( 4)
Male subtotal 102 (100) 329 (100) 977 (100)
Female
exposure category
Injecting drug use 12 (20) 14 ( 8) 86 (20)
Hemophilia/coagulation
disorder 1 ( 2) 1 ( 1) 5
( 1)
Heterosexual contact: 34 (58) 105 (62) 236 (54)
Sex with injecting drug user 20 37 127
Sex with bisexual male 1 7 11
Sex with person with
hemophilia 2 1 6
Born in Pattern-II country 1 4 11
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - 1 2
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection - 2 3
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 10 53 76
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 1 ( 2) 14 ( 8) 41( 9)
Risk not identified 11 (19) 36 (21) 67(15)
Female subtotal 59 (100) 170 (100) 435 (100)
Total 161 499 1,412
20-24 years old
Oct. 1991- Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1992 Sept. 1993 total
Male
exposure category No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
Men who have sex with men 694 (63) 1,489 (60) 6,485 (64)
Injecting drug use 146 (13) 282 (11) 1,245 (12)
Men who have sex with men
and inject drugs 110 (10) 204 ( 8) 1,063 (11)
Hemophilia/coagulation
disorder 42 ( 4) 154 ( 6) 385 ( 4)
Heterosexual contact: 55 ( 5) 118 ( 5) 363 ( 4)
Sex with injecting
drug user 24 40 135
Sex with person with
hemophilia - - 1
Born in Pattern-II(2)
country 8 17 98
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - 2 2
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection 1 4 9
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 22 55 118
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue 6 ( 1) 22 ( 1) 85 ( 1)
Risk not identified(3) 53 ( 5) 220 ( 9) 445 ( 4)
Male subtotal 1,106 (100) 2,489 (100) 10,071 (100)
Female
exposure category
Injecting drug use 123 (32) 283 (30) 931 (35)
Hemophilia/coagulation
disorder 1 ( 0) 4 ( 0) 9 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact: 206 (54) 483 (51) 1,329 (50)
Sex with injecting drug user 118 233 754
Sex with bisexual male 14 32 108
Sex with person with
hemophilia 2 7 27
Born in Pattern-II country 5 11 64
Sex with person born
in Pattern-II country - 1 12
Sex with transfusion recipient
with HIV infection - 2 7
Sex with HIV-infected person,
risk not specified 67 197 357
Receipt of blood transfusion,
blood components, or tissue,12 ( 3) 19 ( 2) 81 (3)
Risk not identified 40 (10) 167 (17) 291 (11)
Female subtotal 382 (100) 956 (100) 2,641 (100)
Total 1,488 3,445 12,712
1 Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance case definition for adults and adolescents.
2 See technical notes.
3 "Risk not identified" refers to persons whose mode of exposure
to HIV is unknown. This includes persons under investigation;
persons who died, were lost to follow-up, or declined interview;
and persons whose mode of exposure to HIV remains unidentified
after investigation.
Table 8. AIDS cases by sex, age at diagnosis, and race/ethnicity,
reported through September 1993,(1) United States
White, not Black, not
Hispanic Hispanic Hispanic
Male
Age at diagnosis (years) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
Under 5 329 ( 0) 1,167 ( 1) 478 ( 1)
5-12 248 ( 0) 183 ( 0) 155 ( 0)
13-19 473 ( 0) 299 ( 0) 186 ( 0)
20-24 4,735 ( 3) 3,282 ( 4) 1,938 ( 4)
25-29 23,298 (14) 12,067 (14) 7,742 (16)
30-34 37,653 (23) 19,017 (23) 11,723 (24)
35-39 35,879 (22) 19,483 (23) 10,671 (22)
40-44 25,717 (16) 13,213 (16) 7,088 (15)
45-49 15,223 ( 9) 6,869 ( 8) 3,793 ( 8)
50-54 8,173 ( 5) 3,800 ( 5) 2,012 ( 4)
55-59 4,671 ( 3) 2,121 ( 3) 1,174 ( 2)
60-64 2,775 ( 2) 1,155 ( 1) 587 ( 1)
65 or older 2,328 ( 1) 869 ( 1) 437 ( 1)
Male subtotal 161,502 (100) 83,525 (100) 47,984
(100)
Female
Age at diagnosis (years)
Under 5 320 ( 3) 1,143 ( 5) 455 ( 5)
5-12 81 ( 1) 189 ( 1) 106 ( 1)
13-19 102 ( 1) 262 ( 1) 68 ( 1)
20-24 672 ( 6) 1,347 ( 6) 594 ( 7)
25-29 1,875 (18) 3,801 (16) 1,699 (19)
30-34 2,455 (23) 5,618 (24) 2,126 (24)
35-39 1,918 (18) 5,094 (22) 1,707 (19)
40-44 1,093 (10) 2,826 (12) 988 (11)
45-49 594 ( 6) 1,187 ( 5) 472 ( 5)
50-54 359 ( 3) 706 ( 3) 273 ( 3)
55-59 344 ( 3) 381 ( 2) 168 ( 2)
60-64 249 ( 2) 248 ( 1) 87 ( 1)
65 or older 632 ( 6) 258 ( 1) 91 ( 1)
Female subtotal 10,694 (100) 23,060 (100) 8,834 (100)
Total (2) 172,196 106,585 56,818
Asian/Pacific American Indian/
Islander Alaska Native Total(2)
Male
Age at diagnosis (years) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
Under 5 8 ( 0) 8 ( 1) 1,992 (1)
5-12 7 ( 0) 1 ( 0) 594 (0)
13-19 11 ( 1) 11 ( 2) 980 (0)
20-24 75 ( 4) 23 ( 4) 10,071 (3)
25-29 267 (13) 123 (20) 43,576 (15)
30-34 420 (21) 173 (28) 69,100 (23)
35-39 443 (22) 126 (20) 66,742 (23)
40-44 346 (17) 85 (14) 46,548 (16)
45-49 218 (11) 34 ( 5) 26,191 ( 9)
50-54 108 ( 5) 17 ( 3) 14,140 ( 5)
55-59 62 ( 3) 9 ( 1) 8,066 ( 3)
60-64 20 ( 1) 10 ( 2) 4,551 ( 2)
65 or older 37 ( 2) 3 ( 0) 3,680 ( 1)
Male subtotal 2,022 (100) 623 (100) 296,231(100)
Female
Age at diagnosis (years)
Under 5 1 ( 0) 5 ( 5) 1,933 (4)
5-12 6 ( 3) - 384 (1)
13-19 1 ( 0) 1 ( 1) 435 (1)
20-24 12 ( 5) 10 ( 9) 2,641 (6)
25-29 23 (10) 23 (21) 7,430 (17)
30-34 48 (20) 34 (31) 10,300 (24)
35-39 38 (16) 14 (13) 8,792 (20)
40-44 37 (16) 9 ( 8) 4,961 (12)
45-49 21 ( 9) 5 ( 5) 2,286 (5)
50-54 14 ( 6) 2 ( 2) 1,356 (3)
55-59 8 ( 3) 1 ( 1) 903 ( 2)
60-64 12 ( 5) 3 ( 3) 599 ( 1)
65 or older 16 ( 7) 1 ( 1) 999 ( 2)
Female subtotal 237 (100) 108 (100) 43,019 (100)
Total (2) 2,259 731 339,250
1 Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance case definition for adults and adolescents.
2 Includes 575 males and 86 females whose race/ethnicity is
unknown.
Table 9. AIDS cases, case-fatality rates,(1) and deaths, by
half-year and age group, through September 1993,(2) United States
Adults/adolescents
Cases diagnosed Case-fatality Deaths occurring
Half-year during interval rate during interval
Before 1981 92 81.5 30
1981 Jan. - June 98 89.8 37
July - Dec. 208 91.3 87
1982 Jan. - June 407 92.6 155
July - Dec. 707 91.1 290
1983 Jan. - June 1,312 93.2 526
July - Dec. 1,654 93.2 939
1984 Jan. - June 2,581 92.8 1,406
July - Dec. 3,408 92.8 1,981
1985 Jan. - June 4,970 92.0 2,825
July - Dec. 6,379 91.6 3,904
1986 Jan. - June 8,413 90.4 5,109
July - Dec. 10,026 88.3 6,568
1987 Jan. - June 13,115 88.6 7,613
July - Dec. 14,574 85.7 8,013
1988 Jan. - June 16,836 83.4 9,397
July - Dec. 17,425 83.1 10,764
1989 Jan. - June 20,096 78.7 12,379
July - Dec. 20,434 76.5 14,231
1990 Jan. - June 22,629 70.8 14,404
July - Dec. 22,128 66.3 15,265
1991 Jan. - June 25,769 58.7 15,902
July - Dec. 27,410 49.4 17,497
1992 Jan. - June 30,925 36.1 17,431
July - Dec. 31,177 23.4 17,555
1993 Jan. - June 27,847 11.4 14,787
July - Sept. 3,724 5.5 2,410
Total (3) 334,344 60.3 201,775
Children < 13 years old
Cases diagnosed Case-fatality Deaths occurring
Half-year during interval rate during interval
Before 1981 6 66.7 1
1981 Jan. - June 11 81.8 2
July - Dec. 5 100.0 6
1982 Jan. - June 13 84.6 9
July - Dec. 16 81.3 5
1983 Jan. - June 32 100.0 13
July - Dec. 42 90.5 16
1984 Jan. - June 51 84.3 26
July - Dec. 62 87.1 22
1985 Jan. - June 99 76.8 45
July - Dec. 128 82.8 69
1986 Jan. - June 138 81.9 65
July - Dec. 189 70.9 91
1987 Jan. - June 218 72.0 117
July - Dec. 257 67.7 168
1988 Jan. - June 258 64.7 134
July - Dec. 338 61.2 174
1989 Jan. - June 352 60.2 171
July - Dec. 333 57.4 184
1990 Jan. - June 357 52.9 191
July - Dec. 377 43.0 190
1991 Jan. - June 357 42.3 163
July - Dec. 325 35.7 199
1992 Jan. - June 384 32.3 168
July - Dec. 318 27.0 197
1993 Jan. - June 213 18.3 161
July - Sep. 27 7.4 26
Total (3) 4,906 53.3 2,615
1 Case-fatality rates are calculated for each half-year by date
of diagnosis. Each 6-month case-fatality rate is the number of
deaths ever reported among cases diagnosed in that period
(regardless of the year of death), divided by the number of total
cases diagnosed in that period, multiplied by 100. For example,
during the interval January through June 1982, AIDS was diagnosed
in 407 adults/adolescents. Through September 1993, 377 of these
407 were reported as dead. Therefore, the case fatality rate is
92.6 (377 divided by 407, multiplied by 100).
The case-fatality rates shown here may be underestimates
because of incomplete reporting of deaths. Reported deaths are
not necessarily caused by HIV-related disease.
2 Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance case defintions for adults and adolescents.
3 Death totals include 270 adults/adolescents and 2 children
known to have died, but whose dates of death are unknown.
Table 10. AIDS cases by year of diagnosis and definition
category, diagnosed through September 1993,(1) United States
Period of diagnosis
Before Oct. 1989- Oct. 1990-
Sept. 1989 Sept. 1990 Sept. 1991
Definition category No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
Pre-1987 definition 106,479 (79) 28,634 (64) 29,523 (58)
1987 definition 26,788 (20) 13,559 (30) 16,078 (31)
1993 definition(2) 1,610 ( 1) 2,402 ( 5) 5,467 (11)
Severe HIV-related
immunosuppression(3) 1,181 2,021 4,669
Pulmonary tuberculosis 362 333 706
Recurrent pneumonia 55 44 85
Invasive cervical cancer 16 8 13
Total 134,877 (100) 44,595 (100) 51,068 (100)
Period of diagnosis
Oct. 1991- Oct. 1992- Cumulative
Sept. 1992 Sept. 1993 total
Definition category No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)
Pre-1987 definition 28,340 (47) 13,876 (29) 206,852 (61)
1987 definition 17,521 (29) 9,537 (20) 83,483 (25)
1993 definition(2) 15,032 (25) 24,404 (51) 48,915 (14)
Severe HIV-related
immunosuppression(3) 13,587 22,718 44,176
Pulmonary tuberculosis 1,195 1,115 3,711
Recurrent pneumonia 223 541 948
Invasive cervical cancer 38 48 123
Total 60,893 (100) 47,817 (100) 339,250 (100)
1 Includes 9 months of data collected under the 1993 AIDS
surveillance case definition for adults and adolescents.
2 Persons who meet only the 1993 AIDS case definition and whose
date of diagnosis is before January 1993 were diagnosed
retrospectively. The sum of diagnoses listed for the four
conditions under the 1993 definition do not equal the 1993
definition total because some persons have more than one
diagnosis from the added conditions of pulmonary tuberculosis,
recurrent pneumonia, and invasive cervical cancer.
3 Defined as CD4+ T-lymphocyte count of less than 200 cells/uL
or a CD4+ percentage less than 14 in persons with laboratory
confirmation of HIV infection.
Table 11. Health-care workers with documented and possible
occupationally acquired AIDS/HIV infection, by occupation,
reported through September 1993, United States(1)
Documented Possible occupational occupational
transmission(2) transmission(3)
occupation No. No.
Dental worker, including dentist - 6
Embalmer/morgue technician - 3
Emergency medical technician
/paramedic - 8
Health aide/attendant 1 9
Housekeeper/maintenace worker 1 6
Laboratory technician, clinical 15 14
Laboratory technician,nonclinical 1 1
Nurse 13 15
Physician, nonsurgical 5 8
Physician, surgical - 2
Respiratory therapist 1 2
Technician, dialysis 1 1
Technician, surgical 1 1
Technician/therapist,
other than those listed above - 3
Other health-care occupations - 2
Total 39 81
1 Health-care workers are defined as those persons, including
students and trainees, who have worked in a health-care,
clinical, or HIV laboratory setting at any time since 1978. See
MMWR 1992;41:823-5.
2 Health-care workers who had documented HIV seroconversion
after occupational exposure: 34 had percutaneous exposure, 4 had
mucocutaneous exposure, 1 had both percutaneous and mucocutaneous
exposures. Thirty-six exposures were to blood from an HIV-
infected person, 1 to visibly bloody fluid, 1 to an unspecified
fluid, and 1 to a concentrated virus in a laboratory. Eleven of
these health-care workers have developed AIDS.
3 These health-care workers have been investigated and are
without identifiable behavioral or transfusion risks; each
reported percutaneous or mucocutaneous occupational exposures to
blood or body fluids, or laboratory solutions containing HIV, but
HIV seroconversion specifically resulting from an occupational
exposure was not documented.
Table 12. Adult/adolescent AIDS cases by single and multiple
exposure categories, reported through September 1993, United
States
AIDS cases Exposure category No. (%)
Single mode of exposure
Men who have sex with men 176,793 (53)
Injecting drug use 68,029 (20)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder 2,212 ( 1)
Heterosexual contact 23,536 ( 7)
Receipt of transfusion(1) 5,978 ( 2)
Receipt of transplant of tissues/organs(2) 6 ( 0)
Other(3) 16 ( 0)
Single mode of exposure subtotal 276,567 (83)
Multiple modes of exposure
Men who have sex with men;injecting drug use 18,885 ( 6)
Men who have sex with men;
hemophilia/coagulation disorder 82 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;heterosexual contact 3,718 ( 1)
Men who have sex with men;receipt of
transfusion/transplant 2,554 ( 1)
Injecting drug use;hemophilia/
coagulation disorder 88 ( 0)
Injecting drug use;heterosexual contact 11,003 ( 3)
Injecting drug use;receipt of
transfusion/transplant 1,114 ( 0)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder;
heterosexual contact 29 ( 0)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder;
receipt of transfusion/transplant 704 ( 0)
Heterosexual contact;receipt of
transfusion/transplant 822 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;
injecting drug use;hemophilia/
coagulation disorder 20 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;injecting drug use;
heterosexual contact 1,764 ( 1)
Men who have sex with men;injecting drug use;
receipt of transfusion/transplant 392 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;hemophilia/coagulation disorder;
heterosexual contact 4 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;hemophilia/coagulation disorder;receipt
of transfusion/transplant 27 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;heterosexual contact;
receipt of transfusion/transplant 163 ( 0)
Injecting drug use;hemophilia/coagulation disorder;
heterosexual contact 20 ( 0)
Injecting drug use;hemophilia/coagulation
disorder;receipt of transfusion/transplant 28 ( 0)
Injecting drug use;heterosexual contact;
receipt of transfusion/transplant 421 ( 0)
Hemophilia/coagulation disorder;heterosexual
contact;receipt of transfusion/transplant 18 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;injecting drug use;
hemophilia/coagulation disorder;heterosexual contact 4 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;injecting drug use; hemophilia/ co-
agulation disorder; receipt of transfusion/transplant 5 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;
injecting drug use;heterosexual contact; receipt of
transfusion/transplant 71 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;
hemophilia/coagulation disorder;heterosexual contact;
receipt of transfusion/transplant 3 ( 0)
Injecting drug use;hemophilia/
coagulation disorder;heterosexual contact;
receipt of transfusion/transplant 10 ( 0)
Men who have sex with men;injecting drug use;
hemophilia/coagulation disorder;heterosexual contact;
receipt of transfusion/transplant 1 ( 0)
Multiple modes of exposure subtotal 41,950 (13)
Risk not identified(4) 15,823 ( 5)
Total 334,344 (100)
1 Includes 27 adult/adolescents and 2 children who developed AIDS
after receiving blood screened negative for HIV antibody.
2 Six adults developed AIDS after receiving tissue from HIV-
infected donors. Three of the 6 received tissue or organs from a
donor who was negative for HIV antibody at the time of donation.
See N Engl J Med 1992;326:726-32.
3 "Other" refers to 11 health-care workers who developed AIDS
after occupational exposure to HIV-infected blood as documented
by evidence of seroconversion; to 4 patients who developed AIDS
after exposure to HIV within the health-care setting, as
documented by laboratory studies; to 1 person who acquired HIV
infection perinatally and was diagnosed with AIDS after age 13;
and to 1 person with intentional self-inoculation of blood from
an HIV-infected person.
4 "Risk not identified" refers to persons whose mode of exposure
to HIV is unknown. This includes persons under investigation;
persons who died, were lost to follow-up, or declined interview;
and persons whose mode of exposure to HIV remains unidentified
after investigation.
TECHNICAL NOTES: HIV/AIDS SURVEILLANCE REPORT
Surveillance and Reporting of AIDS
All 50 states, the District of Columbia, U.S dependencies and
possessions, and independent nations in free association with the
U.S.
(1) report AIDS cases to CDC using a uniform case definition and
case report form. The original definition was modified in 1985
(MMWR 1985;34:373-5) and again in 1987 (MMWR 1987;36 [suppl. no.
1S]:1S-15S). The revisions incorporated a broader range of AIDS
indicator diseases and conditions and used human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) diagnostic tests to improve the sensitivity and
specificity of the definition. For persons with laboratory-
confirmed HIV infection, the 1987 revision incorporated HIV
encephalopathy, wasting syndrome, and other indicator diseases
that are diagnosed presumptively (i.e., without confirmatory
laboratory evidence of the opportunistic disease). AIDS cases
that meet the criteria of both the pre1987 and 1987 definitions
are classified in the pre-1987 definition category. Compared with
patients who meet the pre-1987 case definition, a higher
proportion of patients who meet only the 1987 case definition
were female, black, or Hispanic, or were intravenous drug users
(MMWR 1989;38:229-36).
Each issue of this update includes information received and
tabulated by CDC through the last day of the previous month.
Data are tabulated by date of report to CDC unless otherwise
noted. Data for U.S. dependencies and possessions and for
associated independent nations are included in the totals.
Age group tabulations are based on the person's age at diagnosis
of AIDS: adult/adolescent cases include persons 13 years of age
and older; pediatric cases include children under 13 years of
age. Age group tabulations in Table 13 (only included in the
year-end edition) are based on age at death.
Metropolitan areas are defined as the Metropolitan Statistical
Areas (MSA) for all areas except the 6 New England states. For
these states, the New England County Metropolitan Areas (NECMA)
are used. Metropolitan areas are named for a central city in the
MSA or NECMA, may include several cities and counties, and may
cross state boundaries. For example, AIDS cases and annual rates
presented for the District of Columbia in Table 1 include only
persons residing within the geographic boundaries of the
District.
AIDS cases and annual rates for Washington, D.C., in Table 2
include persons residing within several counties in the
metropolitan area.
State or metropolitan data tabulations are based on the person's
residence at diagnosis of the first AIDS-indicator disease(s).
The cities and counties which comprise each metropolitan area in
Table 2 are listed in the Bureau of Census publication, "State
and Metropolitan Area Data Book, 1986."
Data in this report are provisional. Fifty percent of patients
are reported to CDC within 3 months of diagnosis. However,
reporting delays vary widely and have been as long as several
years for some cases. The median delay in reporting appears to
have increased, from about 2 months in 1982 to about 3 months in
1988; however, recent analyses suggests that reporting delay may
be decreasing.
Completeness of reporting of diagnosed cases to state and local
health departments varies by geographic region and patient
population; however, mortality studies suggest that 70 to 90
percent of HIV-related deaths in men 25-44 years old are
identified through national surveillance of AIDS (MMWR
1989;38:561-3). In addition, multiple routes of exposure,
opportunistic diseases diagnosed after the initial case report
was submitted to CDC, and vital status may not be determined or
reported for all cases. Caution should be used in interpreting
case-fatality rates because reporting of deaths is known to be
incomplete.
Exposure Categories
For surveillance purposes, AIDS cases are counted only once in a
hierarchy of exposure categories. Persons with more than one
reported mode of exposure to HIV are classified in the exposure
category listed first in the hierarchy, except for persons with a
history of both homosexual/bisexual contact and intravenous drug
use. They make up a separate exposure category.
"Homosexual/bisexual contact" cases include men who report sexual
contact with other men. "Heterosexual contact" cases include
persons who report either specific heterosexual contact with a
person with, or at increased risk for, HIV infection (e.g., an
intravenous drug user), or persons presumed to have acquired HIV
infection through heterosexual contact because they were born in
countries with a distinctive pattern of transmission termed
"Pattern II" by the World Health Organization (MMWR 1988;37: 286-
8, 293-5). Pattern II transmission is observed in areas of sub-
Saharan Africa and in some Caribbean countries. In these
countries, most of the reported cases occur in heterosexuals and
the male-to-female ratio is approximately 1:1. Intravenous drug
use and homosexual transmission either do not occur or occur at a
low level.
"Undetermined" cases are persons with no reported history of
exposure to HIV through any of the routes listed in the
hierarchy of exposure categories. Undetermined cases include
persons who are currently under investigation by local health
department officials; persons whose exposure history is
incomplete because of death, refusal to be interviewed, or loss
to follow-up; and persons who were interviewed or for whom follow-
up information was available and no exposure mode was identified.
Persons who have an exposure mode identified at the time of
follow-up are reclassified into the appropriate exposure
category.
Rates
Rates are on an annual basis per 100,000 population. The
denominator for computing rates in Table 1 and Table 2 are
extrapolations based on U.S. Bureau of Census data from the 1980
census and from 1988 post-census estimates. Each 12-month rate
is the number of cases for a 12 month period divided by the 1989
or 1990 extrapolation, multiplied by 100,000.
The denominators for computing race-specific rates (Table 9,
included only in the year-end edition) are based on 1990 census
projections published in U.S. Bureau of Census publications,
"Projections of the Population of the United States, by Age, Sex,
and Race, 1988 to 2080," and "Projections of the Hispanic
Population, 1983 to 2080." Race-specific rates are the number of
cases reported for a particular race/ethnicity during the
preceding 12month period divided by the 1990 census projection
for that race/ethnicity, multiplied by 100,000.
Case-fatality rates are on a semiannual basis by date of
diagnosis. Each 6 month case-fatality rate is the number of
fatal cases reported, divided by the number of total cases,
diagnosed in that period, multiplied by 100.
Trends in AIDS Incidence
Tabulations of AIDS cases by date of report give a general
description of AIDS cases, but analyses by date of diagnosis give
a more accurate description of trends. Delays in reporting,
however, can have a substantial impact on tabulated numbers of
cases diagnosed in recent time periods. About half of all cases
are reported within 3 months of diagnosis, but about 15% are
reported more than 1 year after diagnosis. Delays are
substantially longer for pediatric cases and for transfusion-
associated cases in adults.
Figure 5 (included only in the year-end edition report) shows
trends in AIDS incidence by month of diagnosis. The points on
the plot show the estimated numbers of cases diagnosed, after
adjusting for estimated reporting delays. The smooth curve is
computed using the Lowess procedure (J.M. Chaber, W.S. Cleveland,
B. Kleiner, and P.A. Tukey. "Graphical Methods for Data
Analysis." Duxbury Press, Boston, 1983, Chapter 4).
Reporting delays were estimated by a maximum likelihood
statistical procedure for each HIV exposure category (J.M. Karon,
O.J. Devine, and W.M. Morgan "Predicting AIDS incidence by
extrapolating from recent trends." In: C. Castillo-Chavex, ed.
"Mathematical and Statistical Approaches to AIDS Epidemiology.
Lecture Notes in Biomathematics," vol. 83, Springer Verlag,
Berlin, 1989). The adjusted incidence used in Figure 5 is the
sum of the adjusted incidences for each HIV exposure group.
The Lowess procedure makes no assumption about the overall trends
in the data. A fitted value is computed for each month by
weighted least squares regression using only the adjusted number
of cases diagnosed during an interval about the month (in Figure
5, the 30% of months closest to the chosen month); the weights
decrease for times further from the chosen month. The procedure
assumes that incidence during the interval about each month is
approximately a linear function of time. Lowess tends to produce
a curve that is linear at each end, as observed in the figure;
predictions of future numbers of cases should not be made by
extrapolating the Lowest curve.
The Lowess curve should be considered a description of the
overall trend in AIDS cases. This curve emphasizes that the rate
of increase in incidence slowed during the middle of 1987. See
MMWR 1990:39:81-86.
(1) Included among the dependencies, possessions, and independent
nations are Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American
Samoa, the Republic of Palau, the Republic of the Marshall
Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and
the Federated States of Micronesia. The latter 5 comprise the
category "Pacific Islands, U.S." listed in Table 1.