Escudero Daniel J, Lurie Mark N, Kerr Thomas, Howe Chanelle J, Marshall Brandon D L
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
Urban Health Research Initiative, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Vancouver, BC, Canada; Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2014 Mar 27;17(1):18899. doi: 10.7448/IAS.17.1.18899. eCollection 2014.
Studies examining the use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to prevent HIV transmission among people who inject drugs (PWIDs) have not been adequately summarized. Recently, the Bangkok Tenofovir Study has shown that PrEP may be effective at reducing new HIV infections among this high-risk group. This randomized controlled trial was the first study to specifically examine the efficacy of PrEP among PWIDs. In this review, we present the current state of evidence regarding the use of PrEP to prevent HIV infection in PWID populations, and set an agenda for future research to inform the most effective implementation of PrEP in the context of existing evidence-based HIV prevention strategies.
Despite positive trial results confirming that PrEP may prevent HIV transmission among PWIDs, there remain many questions regarding the interpretation of these results, as well as obstacles to the implementation of PrEP regimens within highly diverse drug-using communities. Aside from the Bangkok Tenofovir Study, we identified only one other published study that has collected empirical data to inform the use of PrEP among PWIDs. The large gap in research regarding the use and implementation of PrEP for PWIDs signals the need for further research and attention.
We recommend that future research efforts focus on elucidating the generalizability of the Bangkok Tenofovir Study results in other injection drug-using populations, examining the willingness of PWIDs to use PrEP in diverse contexts, identifying barriers to adherence to PrEP regimens and determining the most effective ways to implement PrEP programmes within the context of existing evidence-based prevention strategies, including opioid substitution therapy and needle and syringe distribution programmes.
关于使用暴露前预防(PrEP)来预防注射吸毒者(PWIDs)中HIV传播的研究尚未得到充分总结。最近,曼谷替诺福韦研究表明,PrEP可能在降低这一高危人群中的新发HIV感染方面有效。这项随机对照试验是首个专门研究PrEP在注射吸毒者中的疗效的研究。在本综述中,我们介绍了关于使用PrEP预防注射吸毒者人群中HIV感染的现有证据状况,并设定了未来研究议程,以便在现有基于证据的HIV预防策略背景下,为PrEP的最有效实施提供信息。
尽管试验结果呈阳性,证实PrEP可预防注射吸毒者中的HIV传播,但对于这些结果的解读以及在高度多样化的吸毒社区中实施PrEP方案仍存在许多问题。除了曼谷替诺福韦研究外,我们仅发现另一项已发表的研究收集了实证数据,以指导在注射吸毒者中使用PrEP。关于PrEP在注射吸毒者中的使用和实施的研究存在巨大差距,这表明需要进一步研究和关注。
我们建议未来的研究工作应集中于阐明曼谷替诺福韦研究结果在其他注射吸毒人群中的可推广性,研究注射吸毒者在不同情况下使用PrEP的意愿,确定PrEP方案依从性的障碍,并确定在现有基于证据的预防策略(包括阿片类药物替代疗法和针头与注射器分发计划)背景下实施PrEP方案的最有效方法。