Lelutiu-Weinberger Corina, Pouget Enrique R, Des Jarlais Don D C, Cooper Hannah L, Scheinmann Roberta, Stern Rebecca, Strauss Shiela M, Hagan Holly
Center for Drug Use and HIV Research, National Development and Research Institutes, 71 West 23rd Street, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10010 United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2009 Feb;68(3):579-90. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.10.011. Epub 2008 Dec 4.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is mostly transmitted through blood-to-blood contact during injection drug use via shared contaminated syringes/needles or injection paraphernalia. This paper used meta-analytic methods to assess whether HCV prevalence and incidence varied across different racial/ethnic groups of injection drug users (IDUs) sampled internationally. The 29 prevalence and 11 incidence studies identified as part of the HCV Synthesis Project were categorized into subgroups based on similar racial/ethnic comparisons. The effect estimate used was the odds or risk ratio comparing HCV prevalence or incidence rates in racial/ethnic minority groups versus those of majority status. For prevalence studies, the clearest disparity in HCV status was observed in the Canadian and Australian Aboriginal versus White comparison, followed by the US non-White versus White categories. Overall, Hispanic IDUs had greater HCV prevalence, and HCV prevalence in African-Americans was not significantly greater than that of Whites in the US. Aboriginal groups showed higher HCV seroconversion rates when compared to others, and African-Americans had lower seroconversion rates compared to other IDUs in the US. The findings suggest that certain minority groups have elevated HCV rates in comparison to other IDUs, which may be a consequence of stigma, discrimination, different risk behaviors or decreased access to health care, services and preventive education. Future research should seek to explicitly explore and explain racial/ethnic variations in HCV prevalence and incidence, and define the groups more precisely to allow for more accurate detection of possible racial/ethnic differences in HCV rates.
丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)主要通过共用受污染的注射器/针头或注射器具,在注射吸毒期间经血液接触传播。本文采用荟萃分析方法,评估国际抽样的不同种族/族裔注射吸毒者(IDU)群体中HCV流行率和发病率是否存在差异。作为HCV综合项目一部分确定的29项流行率研究和11项发病率研究,根据相似的种族/族裔比较被分为亚组。所使用的效应估计值是种族/族裔少数群体与多数群体的HCV流行率或发病率之比的优势比或风险比。对于流行率研究,在加拿大和澳大利亚原住民与白人的比较中,观察到HCV状况最明显的差异,其次是美国非白人与白人类别。总体而言,西班牙裔注射吸毒者的HCV流行率更高,在美国非裔美国人的HCV流行率并不显著高于白人。与其他群体相比,原住民群体的HCV血清转化率更高,而在美国,非裔美国人的血清转化率低于其他注射吸毒者。研究结果表明,与其他注射吸毒者相比,某些少数群体的HCV感染率较高,这可能是耻辱感、歧视、不同的风险行为或获得医疗保健、服务和预防教育机会减少的结果。未来的研究应明确探索和解释HCV流行率和发病率的种族/族裔差异,并更精确地界定这些群体,以便更准确地检测HCV感染率可能存在的种族/族裔差异。