Literature DB >> 22451838

Intravenous drug use and hepatitis C virus in iran.

Mehdi Zobeiri1, Peyman Adibi, Seyed Moayed Alavian.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Keywords:  Hepatitis C; Intravenous; Substance Abuse

Year:  2012        PMID: 22451838      PMCID: PMC3298870          DOI: 10.5812/kowsar.1735143X.797

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepat Mon        ISSN: 1735-143X            Impact factor:   0.660


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HCV infection is a global public health problem and can progress to cirrhosis, hepatic decompensation, hepatocellular carcinoma, and death, with asymptomatic conditions and few short-term effects in the beginning [1][2]. It is expected that over the next decade, despite a declining incidence of new infections, mortality and associated costs will increase [1]. Worldwide prevalence rates range from 0.01 to 20%, and the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that up to 3% of the world's population (170 million) have been infected with HCV [3]. Worldwide hepatitis C data show significant prevalence rates in high-risk populations, ranging from 30% to 50%, with injecting drug use being the predominant risk factor [4][5]. In most cases, HCV is spread parenterally, and research has identified intravenous and intranasal drug use, exposure to infected blood and blood products, and high-risk behaviors as risk factors in parenteral transmission [1]. The variation in HCV prevalence creates the need for different preventive methods, community interventions, and therapeutic strategies based on economic and social variance [6]. Drug addicts are a high-risk group for acquiring one or more parenterally transmitted infection, such as HIV, HCV, HBV and HTLV-1 [7]. In Iran opiates are the most commonly abused drug type, and it has been estimated that 2.8% of adults ages 15 to 64 are opiate abusers [8][9]. Also, data from the 2006 Spengler Forum Index revealed that 12.2% (180,000) of drug abusers were injecting drug users (IDUs; [10]). Another study that year with a different dataset estimated that there were 200 to 300 thousand IDUs with a mean age of 33 ± 8.9 years in Iran [11]. Nearly 40% of Iranian prisoners were IDUs, and the prevalence of HCV infection among this population has been reported to be between 38 and 90% [12][13]. HCV seroprevalence among prison inmates varies markedly from country to country, but as a whole, research has shown that drug-abusing prisoners and habitual injectors were 90 times more likely than healthy blood donors and the general population to be infected with HCV [14][15][16]. The risk of testing positive for HCV among prisoners was found to be associated with marital status, duration of drug use, IV drug use, shared injection equipment, duration of incarceration, tattoos, and number of times in prison [13]. The point prevalence of sterile-syringe use was 85% among IDUs, but a history of sharing injection equipment was reported between 50 and 70% of them [9][17]. Another study has shown that tattoos might have a higher risk of HCV infection when given in prison [18]. Mirahmadizadeh et al. found that the proportions of unsafe and unprotected homo- and heterosexual contact among IDUs were 19.4% and 37.4 %, respectively [19]. Today, injecting drug abuse is a major and perhaps the most important risk factor for HCV infection [20]. Intravenous drug abusers not only have the highest prevalence of HCV infection but also constitute a potential reservoir of HCV in the community [6]. Injecting drug use and health care provision are the most important risk factors for HCV infection, and the number of HCV-infected persons continues to grow [21]. In early reports from Tehran in 2001 by Zali et al., ELISA tests were HCV Ab positive for 45% of imprisoned IDUs [22]. About 38% of IDU prisoners in the western province of Hamadan, 47% in the northwestern province of Zanjan, 52% in Tehran, 64.8% in the southern cities of Bandar Abbas and Roodan, and 88.9% in the northern of Guilan were HCV Ab positive, whereas the rate in non-IDUs in prison was much lower [1][13][23][24]. Iran has one of the highest per capita numbers of opioid users in the world, with a substantial and potentially growing proportion of IDUs [8][9]. The dramatic growth in the number of prisoners involved in high-risk behaviors and the high rates of community reentry emphasize the need for screening, detection, and treatment of HCV infection as well as harm-reduction programs to help curtail the rise of HCV infection in incarcerated populations and the general population [1]. Because many drug users spend time in prison, it is an appropriate to break the cycle of infection by multidisciplinary interventional approaches targeted at controlling the further spread of these infections among prisoners and to the general population. Intervention efforts have expanded progressively to include comprehensive HIV prevention with epidemiological surveillance, educational programs, research activities, and methadone-maintenance therapy, but they must further incorporate components such as HCV-specific educational programs and encourage inmates to avoid tattooing while in prison [25].
  13 in total

1.  Prevalence of HIV, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C antibodies in prisoners in England and Wales: a national survey.

Authors:  A R Weild; O N Gill; D Bennett; S J Livingstone; J V Parry; L Curran
Journal:  Commun Dis Public Health       Date:  2000-06

2.  Scope of worldwide hepatitis C problem.

Authors:  Robert S Brown; Paul J Gaglio
Journal:  Liver Transpl       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 5.799

3.  Correlation between HIV and HCV in Brazilian prisoners: evidence for parenteral transmission inside prison.

Authors:  M Burattini; E Massad; M Rozman; R Azevedo; H Carvalho
Journal:  Rev Saude Publica       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 2.106

4.  Prevalence of selected sexually and blood-borne infections in Injecting drug abuser inmates of bandar abbas and roodan correction facilities, Iran, 2002.

Authors:  Parivash Davoodian; Habib Dadvand; Khatereh Mahoori; Alireza Amoozandeh; Alborz Salavati
Journal:  Braz J Infect Dis       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 1.949

Review 5.  Prevalence and challenges of liver diseases in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.

Authors:  Ira M Jacobson; Gary L Davis; Hashem El-Serag; Francesco Negro; Christian Trépo
Journal:  Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2010-08-14       Impact factor: 11.382

6.  Evaluation of a prison outreach clinic for the diagnosis and prevention of hepatitis C: implications for the national strategy.

Authors:  C Skipper; J M Guy; J Parkes; P Roderick; W M Rosenberg
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2003-10       Impact factor: 23.059

7.  A cross sectional serological study of the co-infection of hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus and human immunodeficiency virus amongst a cohort of IDUs at Delhi.

Authors:  U K Baveja; D Chattopadhya; R Khera; P M Joshi
Journal:  Indian J Med Microbiol       Date:  2003 Oct-Dec       Impact factor: 0.985

8.  Prevalence of hepatitis C virus infection and risk factors of drug using prisoners in Guilan province.

Authors:  Z Mohtasham Amiri; M Rezvani; R Jafari Shakib; A Jafari Shakib
Journal:  East Mediterr Health J       Date:  2007 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.628

9.  Seroepidemiology of viral infections among intravenous drug users in northern California.

Authors:  J B Zeldis; S Jain; I K Kuramoto; C Richards; K Sazama; S Samuels; P V Holland; N Flynn
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1992-01

10.  Profiles of risk: a qualitative study of injecting drug users in Tehran, Iran.

Authors:  Emran M Razzaghi; Afarin Rahimia Movaghar; Traci Craig Green; Kaveh Khoshnood
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2006-03-18
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Review 1.  Epidemiology of hepatitis C virus in Iran.

Authors:  Reza Taherkhani; Fatemeh Farshadpour
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2015-10-14       Impact factor: 5.742

2.  Identification of Patients with Hepatitis C Virus Infection in Persons with Background of Intravenous Drug Use: The First Community Announcement-based Study From Iran.

Authors:  Reza Fadaei Nobari; Marjan Meshkati; Behrooz Ataei; Mohammad Reza Yazdani; Kamal Heidari; Nazila Kassaian; Zary Nokhodian; Parisa Shoaei; Majid Yaran; Peyman Adibi
Journal:  Int J Prev Med       Date:  2012-03

3.  Willingness to Receive Treatment for Hepatitis C among Injecting Drug Users on Methadone Program: Implications for Education and Treatment.

Authors:  Zahra Alam-Mehrjerdi; Afsaneh Moradi; Fenglian Xu; Mehran Zarghami; Javad Salehi-Fadardi; Kate Dolan
Journal:  Addict Health       Date:  2016-04

Review 4.  The epidemiology of hepatitis C virus in Iran: Systematic review and meta-analyses.

Authors:  Sarwat Mahmud; Vajiheh Akbarzadeh; Laith J Abu-Raddad
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-01-09       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  The critical role of injecting drug users on the spatial distribution of hepatitis C virus; a study in the West of Iran.

Authors:  Farid Azizi Jalilian; Masoud Parvin; Meysam Olfatifar; Hossein Erfani; Jalal Bathaei
Journal:  Gastroenterol Hepatol Bed Bench       Date:  2018
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