Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, University of Washington, SLU Building E, Box 358062, Seattle, WA, 98195, United States; HIV/STD Program, Public Health - Seattle and King County, 401 5th Ave, Suite 1250, Seattle, WA, 98104, United States.
HIV/STD Program, Public Health - Seattle and King County, 401 5th Ave, Suite 1250, Seattle, WA, 98104, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2018 Jan 1;182:86-92. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.10.011. Epub 2017 Nov 16.
In King County, Washington, the HIV prevalence among men who have sex with men (MSM) who inject methamphetamine is high, while it is low among other people who inject drugs (PWID). Local drug problem indicators suggest that methamphetamine use is increasing. The extent to which this increase affects MSM and non-MSM, and whether MSM and non-MSM networks are connected through injection equipment sharing, is unknown.
We used data from two serial cross-sectional surveys of PWID including five biannual surveys of Public Health-Seattle and King County Needle and Syringe Exchange Program clients (NSEP, N=2135, 2009-2017) and three National HIV Behavioral Surveillance IDU surveys (NHBS, N=1709, 2009-2015).
The proportion of non-MSM PWID reporting any recent methamphetamine injection increased significantly from approximately 20% in 2009 to 65% in 2017. Most of this increase was attributable to injecting methamphetamine in combination with heroin (goofballs). PWID who injected goofballs were more likely to be younger, homeless or unstably housed, report daily injection, and self-report an opioid overdose in the past year than other PWID. The majority of PWID who injected methamphetamine reported sharing any injection equipment. Among these PWID, 43% of MSM had last shared injection equipment with a non-MSM. Eight percent of non-MSM men and 15% of women had last shared equipment with an MSM.
Given non-trivial rates of sharing injection equipment with methamphetamine-using MSM, a population with an HIV prevalence of 40%, non-MSM who inject methamphetamine could be an emerging population at risk for acquiring HIV.
在华盛顿州金县,与男性同性性行为者(MSM)一起注射冰毒的男性艾滋病病毒(HIV)感染率较高,而其他吸毒者(PWID)的感染率较低。当地毒品问题指标表明,冰毒的使用正在增加。这种增加在多大程度上影响了 MSM 和非 MSM,以及 MSM 和非 MSM 网络是否通过共用注射设备联系在一起,目前尚不清楚。
我们使用了两项包括公共卫生-西雅图和金县针具交换计划客户(NSEP,N=2135,2009-2017)的两次半年度调查和三项全国 HIV 行为监测 IDU 调查(NHBS,N=1709,2009-2015)的 PWID 数据。
报告最近任何一次注射冰毒的非 MSM PWID 的比例从 2009 年的约 20%显著增加到 2017 年的 65%。这种增加主要归因于与海洛因(goofballs)混合注射冰毒。注射 goofballs 的 PWID 更年轻、无家可归或不稳定居住、每天注射、过去一年自我报告阿片类药物过量的可能性高于其他 PWID。大多数注射冰毒的 PWID 报告共用任何注射设备。在这些 PWID 中,43%的 MSM 最后与非 MSM 共用注射设备。8%的非男性和 15%的女性最后与 MSM 共用设备。
鉴于与使用冰毒的 MSM 非 MSM 共用注射设备的比例相当高,而该人群的 HIV 感染率为 40%,因此注射冰毒的非 MSM 可能是一个新出现的艾滋病毒感染高危人群。