| Literature DB >> 22719814 |
Sandra A Springer1, Jingjun Qiu, Ali Shabahang Saber-Tehrani, Frederick L Altice.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: HIV-infected prisoners lose viral suppression within the 12 weeks after release to the community. This prospective study evaluates the use of buprenorphine/naloxone (BPN/NLX) as a method to reduce relapse to opioid use and sustain viral suppression among released HIV-infected prisoners meeting criteria for opioid dependence (OD).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22719814 PMCID: PMC3365007 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038335
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Subject Disposition.
Difference of data follow-up between Buprenorphine/Naloxone and Non-Buprenorphine retention is statistically significant, p = 0.024.
Baseline characteristics of study subjects, N (%) for categorical variables and mean±SD for continuous variables.
| BPN/NLX (N = 50) | No BPN/NLX (N = 44) | Total Sample Population (N = 94) |
| |
| Gender | 0.10 | |||
| Male | 44 (88.0%) | 33 (75.0%) | 77 (81.9%) | |
| Female | 6 (12.0%) | 11 (25.0%) | 17 (18.9%) | |
| Mean Age (years), S.D. | 45.62±6.05 | 46.59±7.52 | 46.07±6.76 | 0.27 |
| Ethnicity | 0.00 | |||
| White | 6 (12.0%) | 11 (25.0 %) | 17 (18.9%) | |
| Black | 16 (32.0%) | 24 (54.6%) | 40 (42.6%) | |
| Hispanic | 28 (56.0%) | 9 (20.4%) | 37 (39.4%) | |
| Study Site | 0.01 | |||
| New Haven | 13 (26.0%) | 23 (52.3%) | 36 (38.3%) | |
| Hartford | 37 (74.0%) | 21 (47.7%) | 58 (61.7%) | |
| Homelessness | 19 (43.2%) | 14 (38.9%) | 33 (41.3%) | 0.70 |
| Median months of Incarceration | 8 | 7 | 7.5 | 0.81 |
| Study arm assignment | 0.39 | |||
| SAT | 14 (28.0%) | 16 (36.4%) | 30 (31.9%) | |
| DAART | 36 (72.0%) | 28 (63.6%) | 64 (68.1%) | |
| Axis I psychiatric diagnoses (DSM-IV) | 26 (52.0%) | 17 (38.6%) | 43 (45.7%) | 0.20 |
| Mood disorders | 22 (44.0%) | 11 (25.0%) | 33 (35.1%) | 0.05 |
| Anxiety disorders | 16 (32.0%) | 12 (27.3%) | 28 (29.8%) | 0.62 |
| Psychotic disorders | 7 (14.0%) | 6 (13.6%) | 13 (13.8%) | 0.96 |
| Hazardous Drinking (AUDIT≧8) | 13 (26.0%) | 15 (34.1%) | 28 (29.8%) | 0.39 |
| Opioid Craving (≧5) | 27 (56.3%) | 3 (60.0%) | 30 (56.6%) | 0.88 |
| Addiction Severity (ASI) | ||||
| Alcohol | 0.29±0.12 | 0.27±0.15 | 0.280±0.137 | 0.70 |
| Drugs | 0.10±0.18 | 0.27±0.17 | 0.131±0.187 | 0.63 |
| Lifetime Cocaine use | 48 (96.0%) | 41 (93.2%) | 89 (94.7%) | 0.54 |
| Mean CES-D score | 18.36±9.85 | 18.38±12.32 | 18.37±11.02 | 0.70 |
| Major depression using CES-D (score | 29 (61.7%) | 20 (47.6%) | 49 (55.1%) | 0.18 |
| Mean QIDS score | 8.29±4.65 | 8.44±5.77 | 8.36±5.18 | 0.48 |
| Opioid Dependence Score (ODS) | 6.24±1.71 | 6.14±1.58 | 6.19±1.64 | 0.86 |
| Social Support Scale | 61.49±24.81 | 66.67±22.26 | 63.91±23.67 | 0.75 |
| Trust in Physician | 66.86±6.93 | 68.20±6.93 | 67.49±6.92 | 0.68 |
| Health-related quality of life (SF-36) | ||||
| Physical Composite Score | 46.74±12.38 | 43.10±13.60 | 45.04±13.02 | - |
| Mental health composite score | 43.15±13.81 | 44.97±14.03 | 44.00±13.87 | - |
| Physical function score | 74.18±34.44 | 70.47±32.33 | 72.45±33.34 | 0.35 |
| Role-physical score | 67.35±43.96 | 56.98±46.07 | 62.50±45.01 | 0.55 |
| Bodily pain score | 65.66±35.94 | 62.03±37.92 | 63.97±36.72 | 0.66 |
| General health score | 54.18±25.15 | 51.40±27.70 | 52.88±26.26 | 0.02 |
| Vitality score | 61.12±23.61 | 51.05±26.49 | 56.41±25.37 | 0.43 |
| Social functioning score | 68.11±30.94 | 66.86±32.15 | 67.53±31.34 | 0.35 |
| Role-emotional score | 52.38±45.64 | 66.67±43.64 | 59.06±45.05 | 0.12 |
| Mental health score | 66.04±22.67 | 62.70±23.04 | 64.48±22.78 | 0.44 |
| Had Methadone prior to incarceration | 37 (75.5%) | 26 (59.1%) | 63 (67.7%) | 0.09 |
| Dosing schedule | 0.63 | |||
| Once daily | 41 (82.0%) | 36 (85.7%) | 77 (83.7%) | |
| Twice daily | 9 (18.0%) | 6 (14.3%) | 15 (16.3%) | |
| Baseline antiretroviral therapy regimens | 0.07 | |||
| NNRTI+NRTIs | 23 (46.0%) | 12 (28.6%) | 35 (38.0%) | |
| Boosted PI+NRTIs | 22 (44.0%) | 22 (52.4%) | 44 (47.8%) | |
| Non-boosted PI+NRTIs | 5 (10.0%) | 4 (9.5%) | 9 (9.8%) | |
| Others | 0 | 4 (9.5%) | 4 (4.4%) | |
| Viral Load | N = 50 | N = 43 | N = 93 | 0.79 |
| HIV-1 RNA<400 copies/mL | 36 (72.0%) | 32 (74.4%) | 68 (73.1%) | |
| HIV-1 RNA≥400 copies/mL | 14 (28.0%) | 11 (25.6%) | 25 (26.9%) | |
| Viral Load | N = 50 | N = 43 | N = 93 | 0.38 |
| HIV-1 RNA<50 copies/mL | 29 (58.0%) | 21 (48.8%) | 50 (53.8 %) | |
| HIV-1 RNA≥50 copies/mL | 21 (42.0%) | 22 (51.2%) | 43 (46.2 %) | |
| Log HIV-1 RNA (among VL>50 copies/mL) | 2.41±1.11 | 2.34±1.04 | 2.37±1.07 | 0.59 |
| CD4+ lymphocytes (cells/mL) | 375.4±190.9 | 362.0±261.6 | 369.1±225.6 | 0.21 |
Legend: SAT = Self-administered therapy; DAART = directly administered antiretroviral therapy; ASI = Addiction Severity Index; CES-D = Clinical Epidemiological Survey Depression; QIDS = Quick Inventory Depression Survey; ODS = Opioid dependency Scale; SF = SF-36 QoL = Quality of Life scale; NNRTI = non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; NRTI = nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; PI = protease inhibitors; VL = viral load.
Correlates of factors associated with maximum viral suppression (HIV-1 RNA<50 copies/ml) among opioid dependent clients at 24 weeks (N = 94).
| Univariate Analysis | Multivariate Model | |||
| OR (95%CI) |
| AOR (95%CI) |
| |
|
| 1.25 (0.55–2.84) | 0.59 | ||
|
| 1.36 (0.59–3.15) | 0.47 | ||
|
| 4.32 (1.15–16.2) | 0.03 | 5.37 (1.15–25.1) | 0.03 |
|
| 0.32 (0.03–2.98) | 0.32 | ||
|
| ||||
|
| referent | |||
|
| 1.56 (0.65–3.74) | 0.32 | ||
|
| ||||
|
| referent | |||
|
| 3.03 (1.01–9.08) | 0.05 | 4.23 (1.00–18.0) | 0.05 |
|
| 1.00 (0.94–1.06) | 0.99 | ||
|
| ||||
|
| referent | |||
|
| 0.38 (0.11–1.27) | 0.12 | 0.13 (0.03–0.68) | 0.02 |
|
| 0.68 (0.20–2.36) | 0.55 | 0.29 (0.06–1.40) | 0.12 |
|
| 1.02 (0.99–1.05) | 0.18 | 1.02 (0.99–1.05) | 0.14 |
|
| 1.09 (0.43–2.73) | 0.87 | ||
|
| ||||
|
| referent | |||
|
| 0.78 (0.34–1.83) | 0.58 | ||
|
| 0.88 (0.39–2.01) | 0.77 | ||
|
| 0.83 (0.35–1.96) | 0.68 | ||
|
| 0.98 (0.40–2.40) | 0.78 | ||
|
| 1.22 (0.37–4.04) | 0.75 | ||
|
| 0.80 (0.33–1.95) | 0.62 | ||
|
| 0.52 (0.03–10.22) | 0.66 | ||
|
| 0.35 (0.04–3.15) | 0.35 | ||
|
| 0.88 (0.29–2.62) | 0.82 | ||
|
| 0.80 (0.34–1.88) | 0.61 | ||
|
| 0.61 (0.25–1.46) | 0.27 | ||
|
| 0.99 (0.97–1.01) | 0.39 | ||
|
| 1.03 (0.97–1.09) | 0.36 | ||
|
| 1.00 (0.97–1.04) | 0.77 | ||
|
| 1.00 (0.97–1.03) | 0.99 | ||
|
| ) | |||
|
| referent | |||
|
| 1.50 (0.47–4.81 | 0.50 | ||
|
| 5.91 (2.40–14.6) | <0.001 | 10.5 (3.21–34.1) | <0.001 |
|
| 101.1058 | |||
|
| 118.5263 | |||
binomial variables = 0 is the referent group.
Legend: OR = odds ratio, AOR = adjusted odds ratio; BPN = Buprenorphine; CI = confidence interval; ASI = Addiction Severity Index; Craving = craving for opioids Likert scale 1–10 Dosing Schedule = dosing of cART; SAT = Self-administered Therapy; DAART = Directly Administered Antiretroviral Therapy; QIDS = Quick Inventory Depression Scale; CES-D = Center for Epidemiologic Studies on Depression scale.
Figure 2Proportion of Clients on Buprenorphine/Naloxone Over Time.
0: induction; **: N: number of clients receiving buprenorphine.
HIV treatment outcomes for Buprenorphine group and Non-Buprenorphine group over 24 weeks.
| Outcomes | Time | Non-BPN (N = 44) | BPN But Not Retained 24 Weeks (N = 33 ) | BPN And Retained 24 Weeks (N = 17 ) | Total Sample Population (N = 94) |
|
| Mean CD4± SD (cells/mL) | Baseline | 370.5± 262.3 | 384.6± 187.6 | 360.1± 200.2 | 373.6± 225.6 | |
| Week 12 | 492.1± 386.1 | 356.1± 237.7 | 395.3± 241.9 | 425.2± 316.8 | 0.38 | |
| Week 24 | 430.2± 287.7 | 336.9± 160.3 | 382.2± 218.6 | 388.7± 238.9 | ||
| HIV-1 RNA<50 copies/ ml, N (%) | Baseline | 21 (48.8%) | 19 (57.6%) | 10 (58.8%) | 50 (53.8%) | |
| Week 12 | 20 (45.5%) | 14 (42.4%) | 13 (76.5%) | 47 (50.0%) | 0.01 | |
| Week 24 | 24 (54.6%) | 16 (48.5%) | 14 (82.4%) | 54 (57.5%) | ||
| HIV-1 RNA<400 copies/ ml, N (%) | Baseline | 32 (74.4%) | 23 (69.7%) | 13 (76.5%) | 68 (73.1%) | |
| Week 12 | 28 (63.6%) | 19 (57.6%) | 14 (82.4%) | 61 (64.9%) | 0.08 | |
| Week 24 | 31 (70.5%) | 22 (66.7%) | 15 (88.2%) | 68 (72.3%) |
Figure 3Urine toxicology test results (percent of positive results) among tested clients prescribed buprenorphine/naloxone (N = 50).
Figure 4Satisfaction and craving associated with subjects receiving buprenorphine/naloxone.