Estadt Angela T, Miller William C, Kline David, Whitney Bridget M, Young April M, Todd Korthuis P, Stopka Thomas J, Feinberg Judith, Zule William A, Pho Mai T, Friedmann Peter D, Westergaard Ryan P, Eagen Kellene V, Seaman Andrew, Ma Jimmy, Go Vivian F, Lancaster Kathryn E
Ohio State University, College of Public Health, Division of Epidemiology, United States.
Ohio State University, College of Public Health, Division of Epidemiology, United States; Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Gillings School of Global Public Health, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
Int J Drug Policy. 2023 Oct 6:104222. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2023.104222.
People who inject drugs (PWID) in the rural U.S. often inject stimulants, alone or with opioids. The impact of these substance use patterns may influence HCV risk behaviors. This analysis examines the associations of HCV antibody positivity with injecting only opioids, only stimulants (methamphetamine/cocaine), and opioids and stimulants together among rural PWID.
The Rural Opioid Initiative (ROI) consists of eight research sites that enrolled people who use drugs in rural communities in ten U.S. states from 2018 to 2020. This cross-sectional analysis included adult participants who resided in a study area and injected any drug in the past 30 days. The primary outcome was HCV antibody positivity. The exposure of interest was injection drug use classified as only opioids, only stimulants, separate injections of opioids and stimulants, and same-syringe injection of both in the past 30 days. We used multivariable log-binomial regression with generalized linear mixed models to generate prevalence ratios (P.R.) adjusted for demographics, injection history, health insurance, and substance use treatment.
Among 3,084 participants enrolled in the ROI, 1,982 met inclusion criteria. Most participants injected opioids and stimulants in the same syringe (34%) or separately (21%), followed by injecting only stimulants (26%), and injecting only opioids (19%). Half (51%) were HCV antibody positive. Compared to people who injected only stimulants, HCV antibody positivity was more prevalent among people who injected opioids alone (aPR=1.62, 95% CI:(1.29-2.03)), injected both opioids and stimulants separately (aPR=1.61, 95% CI:(1.32-1.95)), and in the same syringe (aPR=1.54, 95% CI:(1.28-1.85)).
HCV antibody positivity, indicating prior exposure, was highest among those who had recently injected opioids, alone or with stimulants. Additional nucleic acid testing is necessary to confirm active infection. More research is needed to determine the underlying causes of HCV antibody positivity by injection use.
在美国农村,注射吸毒者(PWID)常常单独注射兴奋剂,或同时注射兴奋剂和阿片类药物。这些物质使用模式的影响可能会影响丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)的风险行为。本分析研究了农村注射吸毒者中HCV抗体阳性与仅注射阿片类药物、仅注射兴奋剂(甲基苯丙胺/可卡因)以及同时注射阿片类药物和兴奋剂之间的关联。
农村阿片类药物倡议(ROI)由八个研究地点组成,于2018年至2020年在美国十个州的农村社区招募吸毒者。这项横断面分析纳入了居住在研究区域且在过去30天内注射过任何药物的成年参与者。主要结局是HCV抗体阳性。感兴趣的暴露因素是过去30天内的注射吸毒情况,分为仅注射阿片类药物、仅注射兴奋剂、分别注射阿片类药物和兴奋剂以及同时用同一注射器注射两者。我们使用多变量对数二项回归和广义线性混合模型来生成经人口统计学、注射史、医疗保险和物质使用治疗调整后的患病率比(P.R.)。
在ROI招募的3084名参与者中,1982名符合纳入标准。大多数参与者用同一注射器(34%)或分别(21%)注射阿片类药物和兴奋剂,其次是仅注射兴奋剂(26%),以及仅注射阿片类药物(19%)。一半(51%)的人HCV抗体呈阳性。与仅注射兴奋剂的人相比,单独注射阿片类药物的人(调整后的患病率比[aPR]=1.62,95%置信区间[CI]:(1.29 - 2.03))、分别注射阿片类药物和兴奋剂的人(aPR=1.61,95% CI:(1.32 - 1.95))以及用同一注射器注射两者的人(aPR=1.54,95% CI:(1.28 - 1.85))中HCV抗体阳性更为普遍。
表明既往暴露的HCV抗体阳性在最近单独或与兴奋剂一起注射阿片类药物的人群中最高。需要进行额外的核酸检测以确认活动性感染。需要更多研究来确定注射吸毒导致HCV抗体阳性的潜在原因。