| Literature DB >> 23087014 |
Emma Jolley1, Tim Rhodes, Lucy Platt, Vivian Hope, Alisher Latypov, Martin Donoghoe, David Wilson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: HIV among people who inject drugs (PWID) is a major public health concern in Eastern and Central Europe and Central Asia. HIV transmission in this group is growing and over 27 000 HIV cases were diagnosed among PWID in 2010 alone. The objective of this systematic review was to examine risk factors associated with HIV prevalence among PWID in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia and to describe the response to HIV in this population and the policy environments in which they live.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23087014 PMCID: PMC3488708 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2012-001465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Flowchart of study selection.
Figure 2The range of HIV prevalence estimates for countries in the Central and Eastern European region, along with the estimate judged ‘best’ highlighted in green.
Summary of studies presenting multivariate analyses of risk factors for HIV among people who inject drugs (PWID) in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia
| Study (year) | Location | Sample | Individual-level risk factors | Environmental-level risk factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Platt | Estonia, Tallinn | 350 PWID who injected in past 4 weeks recruited by respondent-driven sampling (RDS) | Primary injection of opioid or amphetamine in past 4 weeks*; Duration of injecting career; | Age; |
| Abel-Ollo | Estonia, Tallinn and Kohtla-Järve | 450 PWID (350 from Tallinn and 100 from Kohtla-Järve) who injected in past 4 weeks recruited by RDS. For analysis the participants were categorised as HIV-, HIV+ aware of their status and HIV+ unaware of their status, according to self-reported status at the time of testing | Analysis of risk factors for HIV among participants aware of their status (ref HIV participants): | |
| Uusküla | Estonia, Tallinn | 350 PWID, aged 18+, who injected in past 2 months recruited by RDS | Earlier age of initiation to injecting*; | Ever attended syringe exchange*; |
| Platt | Russia, Togliatti | 268 Male PWID who injected in past 4 weeks recruited in 2001 by outreach workers | Duration of injection; | Ever been in prison; |
| Russia, Togliatti | 89 Female non-sex worker PWID who injected in past 4 weeks recruited in 2001 by outreach workers | Duration of injection; | Ever been in prison; | |
| Russia, Togliatti | 66 Female sex worker PWID who injected in past 4 weeks recruited in 2001 by outreach workers | Duration of injection; | Ever been in prison; | |
| Platt et al, 2008 | Russia, Togliatti | 230 PWID (134 in 2001 from the study above, and 96 from 2004) who reported injecting for 3 years or less and injected in past 4 weeks were recruited by outreach workers in 2001 and through RDS in 2004 | Duration of injecting career*; | Year of study*; |
| Kozlov | Russia, St. Petersburg | 520 Sero-negative PWID enrolled in cohort study who injected at least three times/week in past month or reused another's injecting equipment at least three times in past 3 months | Frequency of injecting psychostimulants*; | |
| Niccolai | Russia, St. Petersburg | 387 Ever injectors were enrolled through RDS | Unsafe injection in past 30 days | Unemployed* |
| Rhodes | Russia, Moscow | 455 PWID who injected in past 4 weeks recruited by outreach workers | Duration of injecting career; | Gender; |
| Russia, Volgograd | 517 PWID who injected in past 4 weeks recruited by outreach workers | Duration of injecting career; | Gender; | |
| Russia, Barnaul | 501 PWID who injected in past 4 weeks recruited by outreach workers | Duration of injecting career; | Gender; | |
| Beyrer | Tajikistan, Dushanbe | 419 PWID who injected in past month aged 17 or over recruited through snowball technique | Daily injection in past 6 months* | Ethnicity* |
| Stachowiak | Tajikistan, Dushanbe | 207 Ethnic Tajik PWID (subsample of above) aged 17 or over recruited through snowball technique | Injecting at least daily for past 6 months*; | Reports narcotics ‘very easy’ to obtain*; |
| Booth | Ukraine, Kiev, Odessa, Makeevka/Donetsk | 778 PWID aged 18+ who injected in past 30 days and were unaware of their HIV status recruited through outreach workers | Injected sedative/ opiate mix in past 30 days | Age*; |
| Robbins | Ukraine, Odessa, Kiev, Donetsk | 313 Youth aged 15–24 who live part or full time on the street and reported ever injecting recruited by time–location sampling | Last sex unprotected*; | |
| Dumchev | Ukraine, Vinnitsya | 268 PWID aged 18+ who report at least three injections in past 30 days and have lived in Vinnitsya for past year, recruited through snowball sampling | Shared needles with HIV+ person in past year* | HIV knowledge score* |
| Taran | Ukraine, 16 cities | 3487 PWID aged 16+ who injected in past 30 days and were recruited through RDS | Type of drug injected in past month; | Gender*; |
| Sanchez | Uzbekistan, Tashkent | 701 Self-identified PWID aged 18+ available for 2 weeks after enrolment by outreach workers | Age at first drug use; | Age; |
* p Value reported ≤0.05.
Figure 3Adjusted effect estimates of individual level risk factors present in multivariate studies of PWID. *New people who inject drugs (PWID) (≤3 years); **male PWID; †female (non- sex work (SW)) PWID; ‡female (SW) PWID.
Figure 4Adjusted effect estimates of environmental level risk factors present in multivariate studies of PWID. *New people who inject drugs (PWID) (≤3 years); **male PWID; †female (non- sex work (SW)) PWID; ‡female (SW) PWID.
Figure 5Estimated numbers of syringes distributed per people who inject drugs (PWID) per year and estimated number of opioid substitution treatment clients per 100 PWID in the latest year for which data is available.39 40
Figure 6Map showing the supportiveness of the policy environments for HIV among people who inject drugs in Europe.