AIMS: To investigate the impact of scaling-up opiate substitution therapy (OST) and high coverage needle and syringe programmes (100%NSP-obtaining more sterile syringes than you inject) on HCV prevalence among injecting drug users (IDUs). DESIGN: Hepatitis C virus HCV transmission modelling using U.K. estimates for effect of OST and 100%NSP on individual risk of HCV infection. SETTING: Range of chronic HCV prevalent (20/40/60%) settings with no OST/100%NSP, and U.K. setting with 50% coverage of both OST and 100%NSP. PARTICIPANTS: Injecting drug users. MEASUREMENTS: Decrease in HCV prevalence after 5-20 years due to scale-up of OST and 100%NSP to 20/40/60% coverage in no OST/100%NSP settings, or from 50% to 60/70/80% coverage in the U.K. setting. FINDINGS: For 40% chronic HCV prevalence, scaling-up OST and 100%NSP from 0% to 20% coverage reduces HCV prevalence by 13% after 10 years. This increases to a 24/33% relative reduction at 40/60% coverage. Marginally less impact occurs in higher prevalence settings over 10 years, but this becomes more pronounced over time. In the United Kingdom, without current coverage levels of OST and 100%NSP the chronic HCV prevalence could be 65% instead of 40%. However, increasing OST and 100%NSP coverage further is unlikely to reduce chronic prevalence to less than 30% over 10 years unless coverage becomes ≥80%. CONCLUSIONS: Scaling-up opiate substitution therapy and high coverage needle and syringe programmes can reduce hepatitis C prevalence among injecting drug users, but reductions can be modest and require long-term sustained intervention coverage. In high coverage settings, other interventions are needed to further decrease hepatitis C prevalence. In low coverage settings, sustained scale-up of both interventions is needed.
AIMS: To investigate the impact of scaling-up opiate substitution therapy (OST) and high coverage needle and syringe programmes (100%NSP-obtaining more sterile syringes than you inject) on HCV prevalence among injecting drug users (IDUs). DESIGN:Hepatitis C virus HCV transmission modelling using U.K. estimates for effect of OST and 100%NSP on individual risk of HCV infection. SETTING: Range of chronic HCV prevalent (20/40/60%) settings with no OST/100%NSP, and U.K. setting with 50% coverage of both OST and 100%NSP. PARTICIPANTS: Injecting drug users. MEASUREMENTS: Decrease in HCV prevalence after 5-20 years due to scale-up of OST and 100%NSP to 20/40/60% coverage in no OST/100%NSP settings, or from 50% to 60/70/80% coverage in the U.K. setting. FINDINGS: For 40% chronic HCV prevalence, scaling-up OST and 100%NSP from 0% to 20% coverage reduces HCV prevalence by 13% after 10 years. This increases to a 24/33% relative reduction at 40/60% coverage. Marginally less impact occurs in higher prevalence settings over 10 years, but this becomes more pronounced over time. In the United Kingdom, without current coverage levels of OST and 100%NSP the chronic HCV prevalence could be 65% instead of 40%. However, increasing OST and 100%NSP coverage further is unlikely to reduce chronic prevalence to less than 30% over 10 years unless coverage becomes ≥80%. CONCLUSIONS: Scaling-up opiate substitution therapy and high coverage needle and syringe programmes can reduce hepatitis C prevalence among injecting drug users, but reductions can be modest and require long-term sustained intervention coverage. In high coverage settings, other interventions are needed to further decrease hepatitis C prevalence. In low coverage settings, sustained scale-up of both interventions is needed.
Authors: T Spelman; M D Morris; G Zang; T Rice; K Page; L Maher; A Lloyd; J Grebely; G J Dore; A Y Kim; N H Shoukry; M Hellard; J Bruneau Journal: J Epidemiol Community Health Date: 2015-03-26 Impact factor: 3.710
Authors: Hannah Fraser; Claudia Vellozzi; Thomas J Hoerger; Jennifer L Evans; Alex H Kral; Jennifer Havens; April M Young; Jack Stone; Senad Handanagic; Susan Hariri; Carolina Barbosa; Matthew Hickman; Alyssa Leib; Natasha K Martin; Lina Nerlander; Henry F Raymond; Kimberly Page; Jon Zibbell; John W Ward; Peter Vickerman Journal: Am J Epidemiol Date: 2019-08-01 Impact factor: 4.897
Authors: Emma Day; Margaret Hellard; Carla Treloar; Julie Bruneau; Natasha K Martin; Anne Øvrehus; Olav Dalgard; Andrew Lloyd; John Dillon; Matt Hickman; Jude Byrne; Alain Litwin; Mojca Maticic; Philip Bruggmann; Havard Midgard; Brianna Norton; Stacey Trooskin; Jeffrey V Lazarus; Jason Grebely Journal: Liver Int Date: 2018-09-22 Impact factor: 5.828