Mumtaz Ghina R, Weiss Helen A, Thomas Sara L, Riome Suzanne, Setayesh Hamidreza, Riedner Gabriele, Semini Iris, Tawil Oussama, Akala Francisca Ayodeji, Wilson David, Abu-Raddad Laith J
Infectious Disease Epidemiology Group, Weill Cornell Medical College - Qatar, Cornell University, Qatar Foundation - Education City, Doha, Qatar; Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS Med. 2014 Jun 17;11(6):e1001663. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001663. eCollection 2014 Jun.
It is perceived that little is known about the epidemiology of HIV infection among people who inject drugs (PWID) in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). The primary objective of this study was to assess the status of the HIV epidemic among PWID in MENA by describing HIV prevalence and incidence. Secondary objectives were to describe the risk behavior environment and the HIV epidemic potential among PWID, and to estimate the prevalence of injecting drug use in MENA.
This was a systematic review following the PRISMA guidelines and covering 23 MENA countries. PubMed, Embase, regional and international databases, as well as country-level reports were searched up to December 16, 2013. Primary studies reporting (1) the prevalence/incidence of HIV, other sexually transmitted infections, or hepatitis C virus (HCV) among PWIDs; or (2) the prevalence of injecting or sexual risk behaviors, or HIV knowledge among PWID; or (3) the number/proportion of PWID in MENA countries, were eligible for inclusion. The quality, quantity, and geographic coverage of the data were assessed at country level. Risk of bias in predefined quality domains was described to assess the quality of available HIV prevalence measures. After multiple level screening, 192 eligible reports were included in the review. There were 197 HIV prevalence measures on a total of 58,241 PWID extracted from reports, and an additional 226 HIV prevalence measures extracted from the databases. We estimated that there are 626,000 PWID in MENA (range: 335,000-1,635,000, prevalence of 0.24 per 100 adults). We found evidence of HIV epidemics among PWID in at least one-third of MENA countries, most of which are emerging concentrated epidemics and with HIV prevalence overall in the range of 10%-15%. Some of the epidemics have however already reached considerable levels including some of the highest HIV prevalence among PWID globally (87.1% in Tripoli, Libya). The relatively high prevalence of sharing needles/syringes (18%-28% in the last injection), the low levels of condom use (20%-54% ever condom use), the high levels of having sex with sex workers and of men having sex with men (15%-30% and 2%-10% in the last year, respectively), and of selling sex (5%-29% in the last year), indicate a high injecting and sexual risk environment. The prevalence of HCV (31%-64%) and of sexually transmitted infections suggest high levels of risk behavior indicative of the potential for more and larger HIV epidemics.
Our study identified a large volume of HIV-related biological and behavioral data among PWID in the MENA region. The coverage and quality of the data varied between countries. There is robust evidence for HIV epidemics among PWID in multiple countries, most of which have emerged within the last decade and continue to grow. The lack of sufficient evidence in some MENA countries does not preclude the possibility of hidden epidemics among PWID in these settings. With the HIV epidemic among PWID in overall a relatively early phase, there is a window of opportunity for prevention that should not be missed through the provision of comprehensive programs, including scale-up of harm reduction services and expansion of surveillance systems.
人们认为,关于中东和北非(MENA)地区注射吸毒者(PWID)中艾滋病毒感染的流行病学情况知之甚少。本研究的主要目的是通过描述艾滋病毒流行率和发病率来评估中东和北非地区注射吸毒者中的艾滋病毒流行状况。次要目的是描述注射吸毒者的风险行为环境和艾滋病毒流行潜力,并估计中东和北非地区注射吸毒的流行率。
这是一项遵循PRISMA指南的系统评价,涵盖23个中东和北非国家。检索了截至2013年12月16日的PubMed、Embase、区域和国际数据库以及国家层面的报告。符合纳入标准的主要研究包括:(1)报告注射吸毒者中艾滋病毒、其他性传播感染或丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)的流行率/发病率;(2)报告注射吸毒者中注射或性风险行为的流行率或艾滋病毒知识;(3)报告中东和北非国家注射吸毒者的数量/比例。在国家层面评估数据的质量、数量和地理覆盖范围。描述预定义质量领域中的偏倚风险,以评估现有艾滋病毒流行率测量方法的质量。经过多轮筛选,192份符合条件的报告被纳入本评价。从报告中提取了针对总共58,241名注射吸毒者的197项艾滋病毒流行率测量数据,从数据库中又提取了另外226项艾滋病毒流行率测量数据。我们估计中东和北非地区有626,000名注射吸毒者(范围:335,000 - 1,635,000,每100名成年人中的流行率为0.24)。我们发现,在至少三分之一的中东和北非国家的注射吸毒者中存在艾滋病毒流行的证据,其中大多数是新出现的集中流行,艾滋病毒总体流行率在10% - 15%之间。然而,一些流行已经达到相当高的水平,包括全球注射吸毒者中一些最高的艾滋病毒流行率(利比亚的黎波里为87.1%)。共用针头/注射器的相对较高流行率(上次注射时为18% - 28%)、避孕套使用率较低(曾经使用过避孕套的比例为20% - 54%)、与性工作者发生性行为以及男男性行为的比例较高(去年分别为15% - 30%和2% - 10%)以及卖性的比例(去年为5% - 29%),表明存在较高的注射和性风险环境。丙型肝炎病毒(31% - 64%)和性传播感染的流行率表明存在高水平的风险行为,预示着更大规模艾滋病毒流行的可能性。
我们的研究在中东和北非地区的注射吸毒者中发现了大量与艾滋病毒相关的生物学和行为数据。各国之间数据的覆盖范围和质量各不相同。有确凿证据表明多个国家的注射吸毒者中存在艾滋病毒流行,其中大多数是在过去十年中出现的,并且仍在继续增长。一些中东和北非国家缺乏充分证据并不排除这些地区注射吸毒者中存在隐藏流行的可能性。鉴于注射吸毒者中的艾滋病毒流行总体处于相对早期阶段,存在一个预防的机会窗口,不应错过,应通过提供全面的项目,包括扩大减少伤害服务和扩展监测系统来实现。