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Epidemiology and Prevention of HIV/AIDS among IDUs Various Forms of Heroin Most heroin found in Mexico and the U.S.-Mexico border region is ‘black tar’ heroin which must be heated to liquefication before injection Negative Health Consequences Associated with Injection Drug Use • Blood-borne Infections (e.g. HIV, Hepatitis B and C, HTLV-I/II, malaria) • Abscesses • Cellulitis • Endocarditis • Overdose Number of Countries, Regions and Territories Reporting Injection Drug Use (IDU) and HIV among IDUs 1992 1995 1996 1998 1999 IDU 80 118 121 128 134 HIV/IDU 52 78 81 103 114 Courtesy of A. Ball, WHO, June 2000 HIV/AIDS Cases Attributable to Injection Drug Use SOURCE: WHO, UNAIDS No Data Reported 0% HIV/AIDS cases among IDUs < 10% HIV/AIDS cases among IDUs 10-40% HIV/AIDS cases among IDUs 40%+ HIV/AIDS cases among IDUs Explosive HIV spread among IDUs HIV prevalence (%) 80 Myanmar* 60 Manipur* & Yunnan Edinburgh Vancouver 40 Ho Chi Minh City Bangkok* 20 *HIV prevalence among general population >1% 1997 1995 1993 1991 1989 1987 1985 1983 Odessa* AIDS cases by transmission group 1987-2003, eastern Europe 1600 Cases Injecting drug users 1400 1200 1000 800 Update at 31 December 2003 600 Persons infected heterosexually 400 200 0 1987 Homo/bisexual men 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 Year of diagnosis 1999 2001 2003 EuroHIV Data adjusted for reporting delays Source: EuroHIV, available online at www.eurohiv.org Proportion of Injecting Drug Users Among Reported HIV Cases* <20% 11% 20-40% 40-60% 60-80% 19.5% 11.2% 39.8% 8% 7.3% 14.4% 22.7% 11.8% 49.7% Spain 92.7% Kazakhstan 72.3% 16% 63.5% Russia 85% Estonia 76.3% 10.8% 6.5% >80% 3.7% 32% 78% Belarus 62.5% Poland 4% Ukraine 69.4% 1.3% 24.5% 1% Moldova 83% 2.6% 12.5% 24% 59.6% 87.1% 82% 60% Uzbekistan <0.1% 50.7%* 70.9% 2.5% 47.7% 1.3% 13.6% 3.8% 49.2% 7.5% 10% *Proportion among AIDS cases in countries not reporting HIV data (Sources: European Commission; * EuroHIV; Council of Europe) 12.3% 76% Average age of first injection in selected international settings 28 20 19 19 19 19 Rio 25 don Age in Years 30 19 26 24 22 18 27 18 15 10 5 Sources: Des Jarlais et al, 2004, Williams et al, 2005, Booth et al, 2005; Strathdee et al, 2005, Stachowiak et al, 2006 Lago s E Sa lam Dar hanb e Dus ssa St. P eter sber g International cities Ode Bei j ing gkok Ban Tijua na Lon ney Syd New York 0 HIV Seroprevalence among IDUs Nairobi 51% 5% 6% Beijing 42% 42% Hanoi All IDUs 16% 16% Minsk 23% 36% 34% St. Petersburg Rio de Janeiro New IDUs 10% Kharkiv Bogota 58% 0% 1% 2% 9% Des Jarlais et al, 2004 Characteristics of HCV Infection • Nearly 4 million U.S. residents are HCVinfected • Only 10-15% clear HCV infection • Treatment success (i.e., cure): 40% • Clinical outcomes: – Cirrhosis – Hepatic cancer – End stage liver disease Incidence of Blood Borne Infections Among Young Injection Drug Users in Baltimore HCV incidence: 19.7 per 100 PY HIV incidence: 6.5 per 100 PY Front-loading: A Risk Factor for HCV Transmission HCV is transmitted 10X more easily than HIV through blood Risk Factors for Acquiring HIV through Injection Drug Use • Individual Level Factors – – – – Using “dirty” syringes Duration of injection drug use Frequency of injection Frequency of injection with shared needles • Environmental Factors – Injecting in shooting galleries – Having a high number of IDUs in social network Sexual HIV Transmission among IDUs is also Important! • Male IDUs: – May also have sex with men (e.g., sex trade) • Female IDUs: – Often involved in sex trade – Regular sex partner is often an IDU – May rely on sex partner for syringes/drugs, and are “second on the needle” Injection Drug Use and HIV in Mexico Injection drug use on the “Bordo” Drug Use in Mexico • Mexico produces 30% of all heroin and 70-90% of the methamphetamine entering the U.S. • Highest consumption of illicit drugs in Mexico is in Baja California • Tijuana has ~21,000 drug users, and ~6000 IDUs • In Mexico overall, men were 13 X more likely than women to have ever used an illicit drug; in Tijuana the ratio is 6:1 Bucardo et al, 2005 IDU Interventions in Tijuana • • • • No needle exchange programs (NEPs) Legal access to syringes at pharmacies Several hundred ‘picaderos’ (shooting galleries) No public methadone maintenance (2 private clinics) • Few NGOs servicing drug users; very limited in scope • Only half of IDUs in Tijuana ever had an HIV test (Magis-Rodriguez et al, 2005) ‘Proyecto El Cuete’ Logo The “Prevemovihl”: A Mobile Clinic for HIV/TB Surveillance and Collaborative Research Dr. Remedios Lozada (El Cuete Co-investigator) and Antonio Granillo (Field Coordinator) Prevalence of Blood Borne Infections among IDUs in Tijuana (n=222) and Cd. Juarez (n=205)* Tijuana Cd. Juarez HIV 2.7% 3.0% Syphilis 14.1% 3.6% HCV 96.4% 95.5% N/A 84.7% HBV (core) Frost et al, submitted *unadjusted for RDS M et ha m rb it Co ca ee d e al on e k ll ne ba alo oin ne in+ Cr ac in He ro Sp in h+ He r He ro M et ai ne te s alo ua h+ Co c am ine M et ph et Ba % Ever Injected Drugs ever Injected among IDUs in Tijuana (n=224) and Cd Juarez (N=205) 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 Tijuana Cd. Juarez IDU Risk Behaviors in Tijuana and Cd. Juarez (last 6 months) Tijuana (N=222) Ciudad Juarez (N=204) Mostly injects in ‘picaderos’ 55% 18% Mostly injects outside 26% 12% Injects with strangers 21% 15% Often or Always lends, sells or rents syringes to others 34% 29% Often or Always uses borrowed, bought or rented syringes 32% 22% Behavior Ramos et al, IHRA 2006. IDUs’ Access to Syringes and Drug Treatment in Tijuana and Cd. Juarez Tijuana Ciudad Juarez Ever used a local NEP 8% 14% Ever received drug treatment 51% 44% Ever arrested for carrying a sterile/brand new syringe 42% 42% Ever arrested for carrying a used syringe 71% 42% Ever bought syringes in U.S. 2% 10% Variable Ramos et al, IHRA, 2006. Factors Independently Associated with Receptive Needle Sharing among IDUs in Tijuana (n=220) and Cd. Juarez (N=203) Variable Ever arrested for carrying used syringes Injecting in shooting galleries 3.12 Cd. Juarez 3.91 2.22 5.01 Injecting methamphetamine Injecting outside 2.71 2.97 - - 3.05 Injecting ≥ daily Tijuana (Pollini et al, submitted) Proyecto Mujer Segura: A Behavioral Intervention Study of Female Sex Workers (FSWs) in 4 Mexican-US Border Cities • Prostitution is quasi legal in Mexico • Up to 9000 FSWs in Tijuana alone • Many women/girls from southern Mexico/Central America • Multiple venues: street, bars, massage parlors, hotels • Sex ‘tourism’ is common Overall characteristics of FSWs in Tijuana and Cd. Juarez, Mexico (N=820) Variable Age Median or % (IQR) 32 (26-40) Duration of sex work (yrs) 4 (2-10) # of clients, past 2 mo 28 (9-66) Live with children 94% Ever had HIV test 49% (Patterson et al, in press) Characteristics of FSWs in Tijuana (N=412) and Cd. Juarez (N=408), Mexico Variable Tijuana p-value 19% Cd. Juarez 30% Married/cohabitating 12 21 <0.001 Ever injected drugs 21% 12% <0.001 HIV-positive 8% 4% 0.03 Years lived in city <0.001 (Patterson et al, submitted) Prevalence of HIV and STIs among FSW-IDUs versus other FSWs in Tijuana (N=412) and Cd. Juarez (n=408) FSW-IDUs Other FSWs HIV 16% 4% Syphilis 49% 22% Gonorrhea 15% 4% Chlamydia Cervical Cancer* 24% 7% 10% 10% Overall, 36% of FSWs had one or more STIs * Self report Patterson et al, submitted Characteristics Independently Associated with HIV Infection among FSWs in Tijuana and Cd. Juarez (N=820) Variable Adjusted Odds Ratio 95% CI Ever injected drugs 2.5 (1.3-4.6) Testing positive for Syphilis 4.1 (2.2-7.6) (Patterson et al, submitted) Interventions to Prevent HIV and Other Blood Borne Infections among IDUs A Continuum of Strategies to Prevent HIV Infection among IDUs • • • • • Encourage abstinence Drug treatment programs Use of sterile injection equipment Disinfection of syringes (e.g. bleach) Encourage reduction of high risk behaviors (sharing syringes, cottons, cookers) • Medically supervised safer injection sites Medication-Assisted Treatment Options for Heroin Addiction • Methadone • LAAM • Buprenorphine • Naltrexone • Prescribed Heroin Drug Abuse Treatment as HIV Prevention • Detoxification alone is insufficient • Methadone maintenance can reduce needle sharing by 50%, provided that adequate dosages are provided (average: 80 mg/day) • More recently, buprenorphine has shown similar results • IDUs who are retained in methadone maintenance have significantly lower HIV incidence rates • Barriers to drug treatment (unavailability, high cost, waiting lists) have severely limited their impact on HIV/AIDS Drug Treatment Every 1$ spent on drug treatment saves 7$ in future costs Barriers to Provision of Drug Treatment in the USA • Lack of third party reimbursement • Lack of sufficient numbers of treatment slots • Lack of supportive “wraparound services” • Only 15% of IDUs in drug treatment at any given time Barriers to services among IDUs in Selected International settings 36% Nairobi 69% 4% Difficulty accessing medical care 11% Beijing 44% 26% Avoid services for fear of authorities 29% 30% Kharkiv 2% Rio 0 Difficulty accessing drug treatment 48% 28% 9% 20 40 Source: Des Jarlais et al, 2004 60 80 How Else Can We Intervene? Source: http://www.anypositivechange.org Interventions designed to distribute new syringes 1. Needle Exchange Programs (NEPs) 2. Repeal Drug Paraphernalia laws 3. Pharmacy Sales 3. Physician Prescription 4. Safer Injection Rooms 5. Vending Machines 6. Public Disposal Boxes Why not just distribute Bleach to Disinfect Syringes? Studies of IDUs in the USA showed that bleach disinfection of syringes reduced the risk of HIV infection by only 13% >> Use of disinfectants has only a modest protective effect on the risk of HIV infection; need to broaden access to sterile syringes Aspects of Sterile Syringe Coverage to IDUs Qualitative Legal: Syringe paraphernalia/possession laws Environmental: • Opposition by police, community, clergy • Availability of secondary exchange • 24-hr availability of sterile syringes Contextual: • Numbers and types of needle sources (e.g., needle exchange programs, pharmacy, vending machines) • Social norms surrounding needle sharing Needle Exchange Programs (NEPs) Goals of Needle Exchange Programs • Provide sterile syringes in exchange for potentially contaminated syringes • Decrease the “circulation time” of contaminated syringes in the community • Link drug users to ancillary services Studies of Needle Exchange Program (NEP) Effectiveness Type of City Year % Reduction in HIV Incidence Study 1994 33% Surveillance 1984Amsterdam 1992 50% Cohort 70% Meta-analysis (cohort data) New Haven New York 1992City 1995 Case-Control Study of NEP Effectiveness: Tacoma, WA Outcome Adjusted Odds Ratio (OR)* % Risk Reduction Hepatitis B incidence 5.5 83% Hepatitis C incidence 7.3 86% *odds of HBV or HCV infection associated with non-use of NEP Potential ancillary services provided by syringe distribution and exchange programs • Condoms (male and female) • HIV testing/counseling • Referrals to drug treatment and medical care • Overdose prevention •Screening, diagnosis and treatment (e.g. STDs, TB) •Provision of vaccine (eg. HBV, HAV) • Wound/abscess care • Multi-vitamins Availability of NSPs worldwide 2000/03 Yes (n = 65) (28%) No (n = 10) (4%) Not Known (n =155) (67%) UN Reference Group on HIV/AIDS prevention and care among IDU (Slide courtesy of Carmen Aceijas) Global Coverage • Only 33% of countries reporting HIV among IDUs have at least one needle exchange program • Only 40% of countries where injection drug use is known to occur have at least one needle exchange program (Strathdee and Vlahov, 2001) No evidence that NEPs are Associated with: • Increased drug use (Vlahov, et al., 1997) • Permissive attitudes towards drugs among youth (Marx, et al., 2001) • Formation of high risk needle sharing networks (Schechter, et al., 1999; Valente, et al., 1998) • Increases in discarded needles (Doherty, et al., 2000) • Increases in crime (Marx, et al., 2000) Safer Injection Sites Function • provide sterile injection equipment • information about drugs and health care • access to medical staff • Doesn’t provide place to sell drugs Effects • successful in reducing injection-related risks and harms (including vein damage, overdose and transmission of disease) Safe Injection Site-Rotterdam 1993 Safe Injection Sites (SIS) Available in Australia, W. Europe, Vancouver, Canada Surpassed expectations and community support is growing Associated with entry in drug tx and reductions in: needle sharing overdose deaths public injecting Evidence to support SIS as an integral part of harm reduction services Syringe Vending Machines Other Interventions • Peer-based interventions to reduce needle sharing among HIV-/HCV- and HIV+/HCV+ IDUs • “Macro”-level interventions (e.g., deregulate syringe paraphernalia laws, reduce homelessness, improve health care coverage) So What About the United States? Adult/Adolescent AIDS Cases by Exposure Category by Year of Diagnosis, 1985-2000 80 Percent of Cases 70 Men who have sex with men (MSM) 60 50 40 30 Injection drug use (IDU) Heterosexual contact 20 10 MSM & IDU Other 0 1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 Year of Diagnosis . Source: CDC, 2000 1997 1999 2000 HIV Among IDUs in the United States • IDUs account for nearly one third of all AIDS cases. • Approximately half of all new HIV infections are among IDUs. Federal Reports on NEPs Report and year Found that NEPs reduce HIV transmission Found that NEPs don’t increase drug use Recommended federal funding ban be revoked National Commission on AIDS, 1991 Yes Yes Yes General Accounting Office, 1993 Yes Yes Yes University of California, 1993 Yes Yes Yes CDC, 1993 Yes Yes Yes National Ac. of Sciences, 1995 Yes Yes Yes Office of Technology Assessment, 1995 Yes Yes Yes NIH, 1997 Yes Yes Yes Number of US Syringe Exchange Programs and Syringes Exchanged, by Size of Program, 1996 (n = 84) Size of Program Programs Syringes Exchanged No. (%) No. (%) < 10,000 23 (27) 64,737 (<1) 10,000 – 55,000 27 (32) 810,247 (6) 55,001 – 499,999 24 (29) 3,658,060 (26) >500,000 10 (12) 9.407,628 (67%) Total 84 13,940,672 (Paone, et al., 1999) Drug Paraphernalia Laws • Restrict the manufacture, sale, distribution, and possession of items like rolling papers, bongs, pipes, freebasing kits, and in some states, needles. • Primarily enacted in the 1960s and 1970s to regulate the growth of the drug paraphernalia industry. • Such laws in 47 U.S. states make it illegal for IDUs to possess syringes • Exemptions Access to sterile syringes without a prescription --United States, 2002 Retail access (16) NEP only (9) No clearly legal form of syringe access (22) No legal forms of access (4) Burris, Vernick and Strathdee, 2002 Resource Allocation- UNODC Pharmacy Sales • Legal in 26 of 50 U.S. states Example: Connecticut • changed its paraphernalia and prescription laws in 1992 to allow for possession and sale of up to 10 syringes – needle sharing among IDUs dropped 40% – and needle stick injuries to police decreased by 66% (Heimer, et al, 1995). – 1995, over 80% of pharmacies voluntarily sold syringes over the counter. What about Mexico? Interventions to Reduce HIV among IDUs in Mexico • Legal for IDUs to purchase syringes at pharmacies, but many barriers persist • Legal to carry syringes, but arrests happen anyway • Only one formal NEP in Mexico in Cd. Juarez; informal • Small scale NEP in Tijuana • Methadone maintenance very limited, mostly private clinics • Buprenorphine not available What we need… • $11 billion U.S is needed to stop the global HIV pandemic but only $200 million needed to stop the IDU-associated HIV epidemic • What we are lacking most is political will Summary • Potential for rapid HIV spread among IDUs and general population • Both drug use and sexual behaviors are important risk factors for HIV infection • Macro-level factors (e.g., lack of sterile syringe access, policing) can indirectly affect HIV risk behaviors • Multiple approaches to prevention are needed across the harm reduction continuum