| Literature DB >> 30457536 |
Martin Hoenigl, Sonia Jain, David Moore, Deborah Collins, Xiaoying Sun, Peter L Anderson, Katya Corado, Jill S Blumenthal, Eric S Daar, Joel Milam, Michael P Dubé, Sheldon Morris.
Abstract
The effectiveness of oral HIV preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) strongly depends on maintaining adherence. We investigated the association between substance use and PrEP adherence, as well as incident sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in a high-risk cohort of 394 participants (391 men who have sex with men and 3 transgender women) who were enrolled in a PrEP demonstration project. We assessed baseline and ongoing substance use over a 48-week period for stimulants and nonstimulant substances and for each substance separately. We measured PrEP adherence by using dried blood spots to obtain levels of tenofovir diphosphate. No differences in these levels were found between substance users and nonsubstance users. Baseline stimulant use was strongly associated (odds ratio 3.4; p<0.001) with incident STIs during the study. Thus, PrEP adherence was not decreased by substance use. Because substance users had increased rates of STIs, indicating higher-risk behavior, they might be excellent candidates for PrEP.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; HIV and other retroviruses; MSM; PrEP; adherence; adherence to HIV preexposure prophylaxis; alcohol; dried blood spots; injection drug use; men who have sex with men; methamphetamine; persons who injected drugs; sexually transmitted infections; substance use; transgender women; viruses
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30457536 PMCID: PMC6256399 DOI: 10.3201/eid2412.180400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Flow chart for selection of patients from randomized controlled trial for study of substance use and adherence to HIV preexposure prophylaxis among men who have sex with men and transgender women, February 2104–February, 2016, California, USA.
Baseline demographic characteristics by substance use status used for assessing substance use and adherence to HIV preexposure prophylaxis among MSM and transgender women, California, USA*
| Characteristic | Overall, n = 394 | Substance use | p value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| None, n = 102 | Some, n = 144 | Frequent, n = 148 | |||
| Sex | 0.191 | ||||
| M | 391 (99) | 100 (98) | 143 (99) | 148 (100) | |
| F | 3 (1) | 2 (2) | 1 (1) | 0 | |
| Median age, y (IQR) | 33 (28–41) | 33 (29–40) | 33 (28–41) | 33.5 (28–42) | 0.885 |
| Race, n = 386† | 0.238 | ||||
| Asian | 12 (3) | 2 (2) | 5 (4) | 5 (3) | |
| Black | 51 (13) | 20 (20) | 19 (13) | 12 (8) | |
| White | 292 (76) | 72 (72) | 104 (73) | 116 (81) | |
| Multiple | 24 (6) | 6 (6) | 10 (7) | 8 (6) | |
| Other | 7 (2) | 0 | 4 (3) | 3 (2) | |
| Hispanic ethnicity, n = 391† | 119 (30) | 30 (29) | 54 (38) | 35 (24) | 0.048 |
| English primary language | 3,786 (95) | 98 (96) | 133 (92) | 145 (98) | 0.066 |
| Education | 0.296 | ||||
| High school or less | 35 (9) | 12 (12) | 15 (10) | 8 (5) | |
| Some college | 146 (37) | 36 (35) | 58 (40) | 52 (35) | |
| Bachelor’s degree | 132 (33) | 31 (30) | 42 (29) | 59 (40) | |
| Postgraduate or advanced degree | 81 (21) | 23 (23) | 29 (20) | 29 (20) | |
| Household income/mo | 0.434 | ||||
| <$2,000 | 84 (21) | 27 (26) | 31 (22) | 26 (18) | |
|
| 248 (63) | 63 (62) | 89 (62) | 96 (65) | |
| Not known | 62 (16) | 12 (12) | 24 (17) | 26 (18) | |
| Randomization arm | 0.019 | ||||
| Standard of care | 196 (50) | 60 (59) | 75 (52) | 61 (41) | |
| Text messaging | 198 (50) | 42 (41) | 69 (48) | 87 (59) | |
| Study site | 0.660 | ||||
| Harbor-UCLA | 48 (12) | 11 (11) | 15 (10) | 22 (15) | |
| Long Beach | 46 (12) | 15 (15) | 17 (12) | 14 (9) | |
| UCSD | 173 (44) | 48 (47) | 62 (43) | 63 (43) | |
| USC | 127 (32) | 28 (27) | 50 (35) | 49 (33) | |
| Median PHQ9 for depression (IQR) | 3 (1–7) | 2 (0–5) | 3.5 (1–7) | 5 (2–8) | <0.001 |
| Median baseline DAST10, (IQR) | 2 (0–3) | 0 (0–1) | 2 (1–3) | 3 (2–4) | <0.001 |
*Values are no. (%) unless otherwise noted. DAST, Drug Abuse Screening Test; IQR, interquartile range; MSM, men who have sex with men; PHQ, Patient Health Questionnaire; UCLA, University of California Los Angeles; UCSD, University of California San Diego; USC, University of Southern California. †Characteristics were not available for all study participants.
Associations of DAST10 and AUDIT results at baseline and ongoing substance/alcohol use with primary and secondary DBS adherence endpoints for MSM and transgender women, California, USA*
| Characteristic | Primary endpoint | p value | Secondary endpoint | p value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | No | Yes | |||
| Substance use baseline, n = 394 | ||||||
| DAST10 problems | 0.80 | 0.55 | ||||
| No/low | 70 (28) | 179 (72) | 173 (69) | 76 (31) | ||
| Moderate | 37 (31) | 83 (69) | 86 (72) | 34 (28) | ||
| Substantial/severe | 8 (32) | 17 (68) | 20 (80) | 5 (20) | ||
| AUDIT score | 0.09 | 0.84 | ||||
| <8 | 81 (29) | 201 (71) | 197 (70) | 85 (30) | ||
| 8–15 | 25 (26) | 70 (74) | 69 (73) | 26 (27) | ||
| >15 | 9 (53) | 8 (47) | 13 (76) | 4 (24) | ||
| Ongoing substance use, n = 394 | ||||||
| Methamphetamine | 0.82 | 0.32 | ||||
| No | 97 (29) | 238 (71) | 240 (72) | 95 (28) | ||
| Some | 10 (28) | 26 (72) | 26 (72) | 10 (28) | ||
| Frequent | 8 (35) | 15 (65) | 13 (57) | 10 (43) | ||
| Heroin | 0.79 | >0.99 | ||||
| No | 113 (29) | 275 (71) | 274 (71) | 114 (29) | ||
| Some | 1 (25) | 3 (75) | 3 (75) | 1 (25) | ||
| Frequent | 1 (50) | 1 (50) | 2 (100) | 0 | ||
| Poppers | 0.54 | 0.66 | ||||
| No | 62 (31) | 139 (69) | 146 (73) | 55 (27) | ||
| Some | 32 (30) | 75 (70) | 75 (70) | 32 (30) | ||
| Frequent | 21 (24) | 65 (76) | 58 (67) | 28 (33) | ||
| Cocaine | 0.48 | 0.33 | ||||
| No | 97 (29) | 241 (71) | 236 (70) | 102 (30) | ||
| Some | 13 (29) | 32 (71) | 33 (73) | 12 (27) | ||
| Frequent | 5 (45) | 6 (55) | 10 (91) | 1 (9) | ||
| Stimulant substances† | 0.37 | 0.75 | ||||
| No | 42 (30) | 100 (70) | 98 (69) | 44 (31) | ||
| Some | 43 (33) | 88 (67) | 96 (73) | 35 (27) | ||
| Frequent | 30 (25) | 91 (75) | 85 (71) | 36 (29) | ||
| Nonstimulant substances‡ | 0.96 | 0.32 | ||||
| No | 67 (30) | 158 (70) | 166 (74) | 59 (26) | ||
| Some | 31 (28) | 79 (72) | 74 (67) | 36 (33) | ||
| Frequent | 17 (29) | 42 (71) | 39 (66) | 20 (34) | ||
| Any substance‡ | 0.34 | >0.99 | ||||
| No | 31 (30) | 71 (70) | 72 (71) | 30 (29) | ||
| Some | 47 (33) | 97 (67) | 102 (71) | 42 (29) | ||
| Frequent | 37 (25) | 111 (75) | 105 (71) | 43 (29) | ||
| Alcohol | 0.27 | 0.88 | ||||
| No | 23 (38) | 38 (62) | 42 (69) | 19 (31) | ||
| Some | 32 (29) | 79 (71) | 78 (70) | 33 (30) | ||
| Frequent | 60 (27) | 162 (73) | 159 (72) | 63 (28) | ||
*Values are no. (%). Primary endpoint value was TFV-DP >719 fmol/punch; secondary endpoint value was TFV-DP >1,246 fmol/punch. For baseline use data for specific substances and substance classes not shown, all p values were >0.2. AUDIT, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test; DAST, Drug Abuse Screening Test; DBS, dried blood spot; MSM, men who have sex with men; TSF-DV, tenofovir diphosphate. †Includes poppers, methamphetamine, cocaine, ecstasy, amphetamine, and other stimulants. ‡Marijuana and alcohol excluded.
Figure 2Substance use and adherence to HIV preexposure prophylaxis among transgender women and men who have sex with men, California, USA. A, B) Boxplots showing dried blood spot TFV-DP levels at weeks 12 (A) and 48 (B) for persons with no, some, and frequent ongoing substance use. C, D) Boxplots showing dried blood spot TFV-DP levels at week 48 in persons with and without alcohol (C) and substance use (D) problems, according to assessments with AUDIT (C) and DAST (D) (cross-sectional analysis). In each case, dried blood spot TFV-DP levels were compared among the 3 groups by using the analysis of variance test. Circles indicate outliers; horizontal lines within boxes indicate medians, box bottoms and tops indicate 25th and 75th quartiles; and error bars indicate levels within 1.5 times the interquartile range of the lower quartile and upper quartiles. AUDIT, Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test; DAST, Drug Abuse Screening Test; TFV-DP, tenofovir diphosphate.
Associations of substance/alcohol use at baseline with study completion and incident STI among MSM and transgender women, California, USA*
| Substance use baseline, n = 394 | Study completion | p value | Incident STI | p value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | No | Yes | |||
| DAST10 problems | 0.59 | 0.043 | ||||
| No/low | 42 (17) | 207 (83) | 161 (65) | 88 (35) | ||
| Moderate | 25 (21) | 95 (79) | 63 (53) | 57 (48) | ||
| Substantial/severe | 5 (20) | 20 (80) | 18 (72) | 7 (28) | ||
| Methamphetamine | 0.15 | 0.037 | ||||
| No | 56 (17) | 275 (83) | 211 (64) | 120 (36) | ||
| Some | 12 (30) | 28 (70) | 17 (43) | 23 (57) | ||
| Frequent | 4 (17) | 19 (83) | 14 (61) | 9 (39) | ||
| Heroin | 0.24 | 0.80 | ||||
| No | 67 (18) | 310 (82) | 230 (61) | 115 (39) | ||
| Some | 2 (22) | 7 (78) | 6 (67) | 1 (33) | ||
| Frequent | 3 (38) | 5 (63) | 6 (75) | 2 (25) | ||
| Poppers | 0.25 | <0.001 | ||||
| No | 41 (21) | 150 (79) | 142 (74) | 49 (26) | ||
| Some | 19 (17) | 94 (83) | 57 (50) | 56 (50) | ||
| Frequent | 12 (13) | 78 (87) | 43 (48) | 47 (52) | ||
| Cocaine | 0.31 | 0.18 | ||||
| No | 58 (17) | 276 (83) | 211 (63) | 123 (37) | ||
| Some | 9 (20) | 35 (80) | 24 (55) | 20 (45) | ||
| Frequent | 5 (31) | 11 (69) | 7 (44) | 9 (56) | ||
| Stimulant substances† | 0.40 | <0.001 | ||||
| No | 30 (22) | 109 (78) | 110 (79) | 29 (21) | ||
| Some | 23 (18) | 106 (82) | 67 (52) | 62 (48) | ||
| Frequent | 19 (15) | 107 (85) | 65 (52) | 61 (48) | ||
| Nonstimulant substances‡ | 0.95 | 0.33 | ||||
| No | 42 (19) | 179 (81) | 140 (63) | 81 (37) | ||
| Some | 19 (18) | 89 (82) | 60 (56) | 48 (44) | ||
| Frequent | 11 (17) | 54 (83) | 42 (65) | 23 (35) | ||
| Any substance | 0.18 | <0.001 | ||||
| No | 25 (24) | 81 (76) | 81 (76) | 25 (24) | ||
| Some | 25 (19) | 110 (81) | 76 (56) | 59 (44) | ||
| Frequent | 22 (14) | 131 (86) | 85 (56) | 68 (44) | ||
| Alcohol | 0.13 | 0.28 | ||||
| No | 16 (24) | 51 (76) | 47 (70) | 20 (30) | ||
| Some | 21 (22) | 74 (78) | 57 (60) | 38 (40) | ||
| Frequent | 35 (15) | 197 (85) | 138 (59) | 94 (41) | ||
*Values are no. (%). DAST, Drug Abuse Screening Test; DBS, dried blood spot; MSM, men who have sex with men; STI, sexually transmitted infection. †Includes poppers, methamphetamine, cocaine, ecstasy, amphetamine, and other stimulants. ‡Marijuana and alcohol excluded.
Cox regression models used for assessing substance use and early study termination and incident STIs among MSM and transgender women, California, USA*
| Model | HR (95% CI) | p value |
|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | ||
| Intervention arm (receiving individualized texting for adherence to daily TDF/FTC) | 1.377 (0.862–2.200) | 0.180 |
| Baseline some substance use (any) | 0.743 (0.426–1.293) | 0.293 |
| Baseline frequent substance use (any) | 0.541 (0.304–0.961) | 0.036 |
| Model 2 | ||
| Intervention arm | 0.924 (0.671–1.272) | 0.626 |
| Age | 0.973 (0.955–0.992) | 0.005 |
| Baseline some stimulant use | 2.690 (1.727–4.190) | <0.001 |
| Baseline frequent stimulant use | 2.604 (1.665–4.072) | <0.001 |
| Positive STI test result at baseline | 1.450 (1.031–2.039) | 0.033 |
*Model 1 assessed the effect of baseline substance use on early study termination. Model 2 assessed the association of stimulant use and incident STIs during the study. FTC, emtricitibine; HR, hazard ratio; MSM, men who have sex with men; STI, sexually transmitted infection; TDF, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate.