| Literature DB >> 34948907 |
Daniel Íncera-Fernández1, Manuel Gámez-Guadix1, Santiago Moreno-Guillén2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sexualized drug use (SDU), also known as chemsex, refers to the use of psychoactive substances for sexual purposes among men who have sex with men (MSM), which has been associated with mental health symptoms. The objective of this review is to systematically review the available evidence on mental health outcomes in MSM who use sexualized drugs.Entities:
Keywords: chemsex; men who have sex with men; mental health; sexualized drug use; slamsex
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34948907 PMCID: PMC8701799 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182413299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Search strategy used.
| Population | Intervention | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Men who have sex with men | Sexualized drug | Psychological disorders |
| (MSM) | Sexualized drug use | Psychiatric disease |
Figure 1Study selection process according to the PRISMA Diagram.
Descriptive characteristics of the included studies.
| Author and Year | Study | Title | Year of Study | Journal | Country | Objective | Study Design | n |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Batisse et al., 2016) [ | - | Use of psychostimulants in a sexual context: Analysis of cases reported to the French network of Addictovigilance Centers | 2016 | Therapies | France | Estimate prevalence of psychiatric disorders, intoxication, dependence and substance abuse in people who practice slamsex. | Cross-sectional | 51 |
| (Brogan et al., 2019) [ | Canadian EMIS-2017 | Canadian results from the European Men-who-have-sex-with-men Internet survey (EMIS-2017) | 2019 | Canada Communicable Disease Report | Canada | Assess needs related to sexually transmitted infections of gays, bisexuals, and other men who have sex with men. | Cross-sectional | 5165 |
| (Card et al., 2019) [ | Momentum Health Study | Escape expectancies and sexualized substance use among gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men | 2019 | AIDS care | Canada | Examine how McKirnan’s Cognitive Escape Theory (CES) is related to the use of sexualized substances. | Cross-sectional | 774 |
| (Demant & Oviedo-Trespalacios, 2019) [ | - | Harmless? A hierarchical analysis of poppers use correlates among young gay and bisexual men | 2019 | Drug and Alcohol Review | Australia | Examine recent poppers use patterns with personal characteristics, other substance use, as well as mental and psychosocial health. | Cross-sectional | 836 |
| (Dolengevich-Segal et al., 2019) [ | U-SEX GESIDA 9416 study | Drug-related and psychopathological symptoms in HIV-positive men who have sex with men who inject drugs during sex (slamsex): Data from the U-SEX GESIDA 9416 Study | 2019 | Plos One | Spain | Describe the physical and psychopathological symptoms of sexualized intravenous drug use (slamsex). | Cross-sectional | 742 |
| (Hammoud et al., 2017) [ | Following Lives Undergoing Change (Flux) Study | Intensive sex partying with gamma-hydroxybutyrate: factors associated with using gamma-hydroxybutyrate for chemsex among Australian gay and bisexual men—results from the Flux Study | 2017 | Sexual Health | Australia | To study factors associated with the use of GHB and its relationship with sex: risk behavior, contexts, consequences and motivations for its use. | Prospective observational | 3190 |
| (Hibbert et al., 2019) [ | - | Psychosocial and sexual characteristics associated with sexualized drug use and chemsex among men who have sex with men (MSM) in the UK | 2019 | Sexually Transmitted Infections | United Kingdom | To study psychosocial and sexual patterns of the use of sexualized drugs in men who have a relationship with other men. | Cross-sectional | 3676 |
| (Nöstlinger et al., 2020) [ | Be-PrEP-ared | Drug use, depression and sexual risk behavior: a syndemic among early pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) adopters in Belgium? | 2020 | AIDS Care | Belgium | To assess the interaction of drug use and depression with risky sexual behavior. | Longitudinal, prospective cohort study | Baseline (200), M9 (186) and M18 (179) |
| (Schecke et al., 2019) [ | German Chemsex Survey | Crystal Methamphetamine use in sexual settings among German men who have sex with men | 2019 | Frontiers in Psychiatry | Germany | To study the use of methamphetamine in sexual settings and its association with the acquisition and transmission of sexually transmitted infections. | Cross-sectional | 1050 |
| (Sewell et al., 2017) [ | AURAH | Poly drug use, chemsex drug use, and associations with sexual risk behavior in HIV-negative men who have sex with men attending sexual health clinics | 2017 | International Journal of Drug Policy | England | To assess prevalence of multiple drug use and chemsex practice and its association with risky sexual behavior. | Cross-sectional | 1484 |
| (Trouiller et al., 2020) [ | PREVAGAY 2015 bio-behavioural survey | Injecting drug use during sex (known as “slamming”) among men who have sex with men: Results from a time-location sampling survey conducted in five cities, France | 2020 | International Journal of Drug Policy | France | Estimate prevalence of men who practice slamsex and identify factors associated with this practice. | Cross-sectional | 2610 |
| (Vaccher et al., 2020) [ | Prevalence, frequency, and motivations for alkyl nitrite use among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men in Australia | 2020 | International Journal of Drug Policy | Australia | To determine the prevalence and frequency of popper use and the factors associated with its use and to examine the motivations for using poppers. | Prospective observational | 3273 |
-: no data.
Consumer drugs in included studies.
| Author and Year | Chemsex | Drugs | Cannabis | Poppers | GHB/ | Mephedrone | Speed/ | Ketamine | MDMA | Viagra | Cocaine | Slamming |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Batisse et al. (2016) [ | 90% | Of those who practice slamming | 11% | 11% | 13% | ** | 8% | 8% | 6% | - | 33% | * 60.78% |
| Brogan et al. (2019) [ | 5.8% | Of the entire sample | 46.6% | - | 7.35% | 0.40% | 6.1 % | - | 8.7% | - | 14% | 3.5% |
| Card et al. (2019) [ | 11.59% | Of the entire sample | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Demant & Oviedo-Trespalacios, (2019) [ | - | Of the entire sample | - | * 43.8% | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Dolengevich-Segal et al. (2019) [ | 29.11% | From chemsex group | - | 78.7% | 71.7% | 69.4% | 29.6% | 36.1% | 48.6% | - | 45.4% | * 15.7% |
| Hammoud et al. (2017) [ | 16.9% | Of the entire sample | 30.0% | 35.1% | * 5.4% | - | 12% | - | 17.7% | 36.4% | - | - |
| Hibbert et al. | 6% | From | 13% | 28% | 3% | 3% | 1% | 2% | 4% | 12% | 10% | - |
| Nöstlinger et al. (2020) [ | Baseline: 45% |
| - | - | 38.5% | 7.5% | 15% | 34.5% | 42.5% | - | 30% | - |
| Schecke et al. (2019) [ | 12.4% | Of those who used methamphetamine | 51.5% | 93.8% | 70.8% | 40.8% | * | 53.8% | 62.3% | 76.2% | 46.9% | - |
| Sewell et al. (2017) [ | 21.8% | Of the entire sample | 21.0% | 32.9% | 12.0% | 19.1% | 6.4% | 8.4% | 13.0% | 17.1% | 19.4% | 2% |
| Trouiller et al. (2020) [ | 20.8% | Of those who practice slamming | - | - | 49% | 55% | 43% | - | - | - | 43% | * 3.1% |
| Vaccher et al. (2020) [ | 26.3% | Of those who used poppers | - | * 45.9% | 16.5% | - | 20% | - | 33.1% | - | 28.4% | - |
*: drug or testing practice in the study; **: refers to being the most consumed but does not indicate how much; -: no data. GHB/GBL: Gamma hydroxybutyrate/Gamma hydroxybutyric; Meth: Methamphetamine.
Psychological instruments included.
| (Batisse et al., 2016) | (Brogan et al., 2019) | (Card et al., 2019) | (Demant & Oviedo-Trespalacios, 2019) | (Dolengevich-Segal et al., | (Hammoud et al., 2017) | (Hibbert et al., 2019) | (Nöstlinger et al., 2020) | (Schecke et al., 2019) | (Sewell et al., 2017) | (Trouiller et al., 2020) | (Vaccher et al., 2020) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PHQ-4 | * | |||||||||||
| PHQ-9 | * | |||||||||||
| PHQ-15 | * | |||||||||||
| CAGE-4 | * | |||||||||||
| EMS | * | |||||||||||
| HADS | * | |||||||||||
| SSSS | * | |||||||||||
| SAS | * | |||||||||||
| SOS | * | |||||||||||
| ASSIST | * | |||||||||||
| PSOC-LGBT | * | |||||||||||
| DTCQ | * | |||||||||||
| SUMS | * | |||||||||||
| MHC | * | |||||||||||
| K10 | * | * | ||||||||||
| BRS | * | |||||||||||
| MSS | * | |||||||||||
| CISS | * | |||||||||||
| AUDIT-C | * | * | ||||||||||
| SMSE | * | |||||||||||
| GAD-7 | * | * | * | * | ||||||||
| IHS | * | |||||||||||
| OBCS | * | |||||||||||
| UCLA | * | |||||||||||
| SWLS | * | |||||||||||
| RSE | ||||||||||||
| SDS | ||||||||||||
| PC-PTSD | * | |||||||||||
| SF-36 | * | |||||||||||
| GSE | * | |||||||||||
| * | ||||||||||||
| SS | * | |||||||||||
| SPB | * |
* Used instrument; PHQ = Patient Health Questionnaire; CAGE-4 = CAGE questionnaire; EMS = Escape Motivation Scale; HADS = Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale; SSSS = Sexual Sensation Seeking Scale; SAS = Sexual Altruism Scale, SOS = Scale of Optimism-Skepticism; ASSIST = Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test; PSOC-LGBT = Psychological Sense of LGBT Community Scale; DTCQ = Drug-Taking Confidence Questionnaire; SUMS = Substance Use Motives Scale; MHC = Mental Health Continuum; K10 = Kessler-10 Psychological Distress Scale; BRS = Brief Resilience Scale; MSS = Minority Stress Scales; CISS = Coping Inventory of Stressful Situations; AUDIT-C = Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test C; SMSE = Scale Measuring Social Engagement; GAD-7 = Generalized Anxiety Disorder Assessment; his = Internalized Homophobia Scale; OBCS = Objectified Body Consciousness Scale; UCLA = UCLA Loneliness Scale; SWLS = Satisfaction With Life Scale; PC-PTSD = Primary Care PTSD Screen; SF-36 = Short Form Health Survey; GSE = Gay social engagement; QQ = Questions in the Questionnaire on previously diagnosed psychiatric disorders; SS = self-reported symptoms; SPB = Self-reported Psychological Background.